Handbook of
PEDIATRIC OBESITY Clinical Management
Handbook of
PEDIATRIC OBESITY Clinical Management Edited by
Melinda S. Sothern Stewart T. Gordon T. Kristian von Almen
Boca Raton London New York
A CRC title, part of the Taylor & Francis imprint, a member of the Taylor & Francis Group, the academic division of T&F Informa plc.
Published in 2006 by CRC Press Taylor & Francis Group 6000 Broken Sound Parkway NW, Suite 300 Boca Raton, FL 33487-2742 © 2006 by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC CRC Press is an imprint of Taylor & Francis Group No claim to original U.S. Government works Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 International Standard Book Number-10: 1-57444-913-3 (Hardcover) International Standard Book Number-13: 978-1-57444-913-6 (Hardcover) Library of Congress Card Number 2005050122 This book contains information obtained from authentic and highly regarded sources. Reprinted material is quoted with permission, and sources are indicated. A wide variety of references are listed. Reasonable efforts have been made to publish reliable data and information, but the author and the publisher cannot assume responsibility for the validity of all materials or for the consequences of their use. No part of this book may be reprinted, reproduced, transmitted, or utilized in any form by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying, microfilming, and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without written permission from the publishers. For permission to photocopy or use material electronically from this work, please access www.copyright.com (http://www.copyright.com/) or contact the Copyright Clearance Center, Inc. (CCC) 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, 978-750-8400. CCC is a not-for-profit organization that provides licenses and registration for a variety of users. For organizations that have been granted a photocopy license by the CCC, a separate system of payment has been arranged. Trademark Notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks, and are used only for identification and explanation without intent to infringe. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Handbook of pediatric obesity : clinical management / edited by Melinda Sothern, Stewart T. Gordon, T. Kristian von Almen. p. ; cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 1-57444-913-3 (alk. paper) 1. Obesity in children--Treatment--Handbooks, manuals, etc. I. Sothern, Melinda. II. Gordon, Stewart T. III. Von Almen, T. Kristian. [DNLM: 1. Obesity--therapy--Child. 2. Obesity--diet therapy--Child. WD 210 H2368 2005] RJ399.C6H36 2005 618.92’398--dc22
2005050122
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Preface We are very pleased and honored to edit the Handbook of Pediatric Obesity: Clinical Management. We accept this responsibility with much enthusiasm. We believe that this text will provide a scientifically sound, clinically relevant survey of the available approaches for the treatment of pediatric obesity to pediatric health care and research professionals. In addition, a portion of proceeds of this book will be donated to the Pediatric Obesity Interest Group of the North American Association for the Study of the Obesity (NAASO): The Obesity Society and, thus, will be available to us as a community of researchers and health care providers for the purposes of educational seminars, research opportunities, and future pediatric obesity prevention and treatment projects. Over the last two decades, we have been privileged to participate in clinical research studies that provided continued opportunities to review the scientific evidence related to pediatric obesity. This experience and knowledge confirmed the complexity of pediatric obesity. It is clear from the scientific literature that the direct causes of pediatric obesity remain undiscovered and that standards for treatment, although desperately needed, are nonexistent. During this same two decades, we also had the opportunity to provide treatment to thousands of overweight children and their families. We observed over this time that the severity of obesity in these patients has increased and, even more disturbing, that these children have become more and more resistant to traditional treatment approaches. Today’s overweight children are very difficult to treat. The sentiment of most clinicians and researchers has become negative and self-defeating. However, rather than assume the position that the only way to curb the current pediatric obesity epidemic is to ignore this generation and focus on prevention in the next, we, along with the contributing authors, accepted the task of compiling the available management, medical, nutrition, psychological, and physical activity facts, models, theories, interventions, and evaluation techniques. Our mission was to provide the most clinically appropriate, scientifically supported source of information to the pediatric health care and research professional. It is our hope we have accomplished our mission. We feel we have produced a comprehensive, state-of-the-art, and easyto-use reference that can be used by pediatric health care and research professionals to develop programs and provide the best possible care to overweight children in clinical settings. The introduction provides an overview of the problem of pediatric obesity and includes global options for solutions. Section 1 details pediatric obesity clinical management strategies, challenges, business plans, and evaluation methods. Section 2 discusses the medical aspects of treatment including complications and comorbidities of pediatric obesity and the physician’s role in treatment. In Section 3, psychosocial and physical considerations associated with pediatric obesity are discussed, as well as how each affects the treatment process. Section 4 offers the reader a comprehensive survey of pediatric obesity medical, nutrition, behavioral, and exercise evaluation methods and techniques. Options for nutrition intervention in overweight youth are detailed in Section 5, behavioral counseling in Section 6, and methods to increase physical activity and provide exercise training in Section 7. Section 8 discusses Internet-based approaches used in pediatric clinical settings, Section 9, the role of pharmacology as it relates to pediatric obesity treatment, and Section 10, an overview of surgery options for significantly obese adolescents. The final section presents specific techniques and methods for conducting interdisciplinary, interactive group instruction for overweight children and their families. A comprehensive appendix follows Chapter 20 and is divided into three sections: clinical management forms, testing and measurement protocols, and sample intervention materials. Throughout the text, individual chapters discuss management strategies, methods, and techniques that refer to specific forms, protocols, handouts, and sources located in the Appendix. These are practical and applied techniques, information, and tools that may be used,
as needed, to develop, modify, implement, and evaluate weight-management programs for children and adolescents in clinical and research settings. As pediatric health care and research professionals, you have an important responsibility to overweight children and adolescents. Your approach, interaction, and follow-up procedures have a tremendous effect on the physical and emotional health of your patients. When families come to you for help with overweight problems, your initial words, actions, and demeanor will set the stage for weight-management success or failure. We strongly believe that the success or failure of your patients to achieve a healthy weight is a shared responsibility. We encourage you to accept this responsibility and this challenge with an open heart and a positive attitude. We hope you will dedicate the necessary time and energy to providing the most appropriate care to your overweight patients. Your reward will be an unbelievable feeling of accomplishment and self-satisfaction. Throughout this text we’ve provided you with the necessary information and tools to do your job well. This knowledge will enable you to become proficient in matching or tailoring the available treatment plans to the medical, physical, and emotional needs of your patient. There are many options, and it is clear that there is no single solution for every overweight child. However, for each child, an individualized plan can be developed that will best manage obesity and enhance his or her emotional and physical health. Melinda S. Sothern, Ph.D. Associate Professor and Director Section of Health Promotion School of Public Health Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center T. Kristian von Almen, Ph.D. Research Psychologist, Assistant Clinical Professor in Pediatrics Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center Stewart T. Gordon, M.D., F.A.A.P. Associate Professor of Clinical Pediatrics Louisiana State University of Medicine and Chief of Pediatrics LSU Health Sciences Center/ Earl K. Long Medical Center
Acknowledgments We gratefully acknowledge the expert manuscripts provided by all of the contributing authors in this volume, who took time away from their challenging clinical and research obligations to provide this important information. We wish to express our gratitude to Dr. Michael Goran for accepting the challenge of editing The Handbook of Pediatric Obesity: Epidemiology, Etiology, and Prevention, which provides essential background information for this volume — Clinical Management. Our research associate, Connie VanVrancken-Tompkins, deserves special mention not only for her assistance in editing the chapters and appendix but also for help in writing several chapters. We especially thank our Acquisitions Editor at Dekker/CRC Press, Susan Lee, for her assistance during the proposal process and for believing in this project and providing us with a venue to reach so many health care and research professionals. We wish to also thank Ms. Leslie Capo, whose long hours of hard work as our media coordinator at the Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center (LSUHSC) have provided us with a multitude of opportunities to highlight our academic and clinical successes and translate other important pediatric obesity scientific findings to the public. We appreciate the guidance and support of Dr. Eric Ravussin, Dr. Mark Loftin, Dr. John Udall, Dr. Frank Greenway, and Dr. Claude Bouchard, who are not only mentors but also inspirations and role models for all of us. We are grateful for the help and encouragement of Dr. Elizabeth Fontham, Dr. Charlie Brown, Dr. Donna Ryan, Dr. George Bray, Dr. Keely Carlisle, Dr. Sandra Hunter, Dr. Alphonso Vargas, Dr. Ricardo Sorensen, Dr. Robert Suskind, and Dr. Stuart Chalew. We gratefully acknowledge the editorial, computer, and clerical support of our student worker, Courtney Brooks, and the thoughtful review and helpful comments provided by Dr. David Ludwig and Dr. Cara Ebbeling. We sincerely appreciate the continued support and guidance of LSUHSC, School of Public Health and Department of Pediatrics, the Pennington Biomedical Research Center, The University of New Orleans, and NAASO: The Obesity Society. We are grateful to the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Dietetic Association, the American College of Sports Medicine, the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the U.S. Surgeon General for their continued commitment to pediatric obesity prevention and treatment.
Contributors Oded Bar-Or, M.D., F.A.C.S.M. Children’s Exercise and Nutrition Centre McMaster University Hamilton, Ontario, Canada Robert I. Berkowitz, M.D. Weight and Eating Disorders Program University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Courtney Brooks, B.S. Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, School of Public Health New Orleans, Louisiana Lauren Keely Carlisle, M.D., M.P.H. Department of Pediatrics Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center New Orleans, Louisiana Nancy Copperman, M.S., R.D., C.D.N. Division of Adolescent Medicine Schneider Children’s Hospital New Hyde Park, New York Canice E. Crerand, Ph.D. Department of Psychiatry Weight and Eating Disorders Program University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Stephen Daniels, M.D., Ph.D. Division of Cardiology University of Cincinnati Cincinnati, Ohio and Comprehensive Weight Management Center Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center Cincinnati, Ohio Stewart T. Gordon, M.D., F.A.A.P. Louisiana State University School of Medicine and LSU Health Sciences Center/Earl K. Long Medical Center Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Thomas Inge, M.D., Ph.D., F.A.C.S., F.A.A.P. Department of Surgery, Division of Pediatric Surgery University of Cincinnati Cincinnati, Ohio and Comprehensive Weight Management Center Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center Cincinnati, Ohio Marc S. Jacobson, M.D. Albert Einstein College of Medicine Yeshiva University and Center for Atherosclerosis Prevention, Division of Adolescent Medicine Schneider Children’s Hospital Center New Hyde Park, New York Shelley Kirk, Ph.D., R.D., L.D. Division of Cardiology University of Cincinnati Cincinnati, Ohio and Comprehensive Weight Management Center Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center Cincinnati, Ohio Nancy F. Krebs, M.D., M.S. University of Colorado School of Medicine Denver, Colorado Mark Loftin, Ph.D. Department of Human Performance and Health Promotion University of New Orleans New Orleans, Louisiana Pamela Davis Martin, Ph.D. Pennington Biomedical Research Center Baton Rouge, Louisiana Valerie H. Myers, Ph.D. Pennington Biomedical Research Center Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Scott Owens, Ph.D. Department of Health, Exercise Science, and Recreation Management University of Mississippi Oxford, Mississippi Thomas Rowland, M.D. Baystate Medical Center Springfield, Massachusetts Heidi Schumacher, R.D., L.D.N., C.D.E. Children’s Hospital of New Orleans New Orleans, Louisiana and Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center Pediatric Weight Management Program New Orleans, Louisiana Jeffrey B. Schwimmer, M.D. Department of Pediatrics University of California, San Diego San Diego, California and San Diego Children’s Hospital and Health Center San Diego, California Melinda S. Sothern, Ph.D., C.E.P. School of Public Health Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center New Orleans, Louisiana Tiffany M. Stewart, Ph.D. Pennington Biomedical Research Center Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Dennis M. Styne, M.D. University of California Davis Sacramento, California Camille Thélin, B.A. Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, School of Public Health New Orleans, Louisiana Connie VanVrancken-Tompkins, M.A. Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, School of Public Health New Orleans, Louisiana T. Kristian von Almen, Ph.D. Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center New Orleans, Louisiana Thomas A. Wadden, Ph.D. University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Heather Walden, M.S. Pennington Biomedical Research Center Baton Rouge, Louisiana Donald A. Williamson, Ph.D. Pennington Biomedical Research Center Baton Rouge, Louisiana Emily York-Crowe, M.A. Pennington Biomedical Research Center Baton Rouge, Louisiana Meg Zeller, Ph.D. Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, University of Cincinnati Cincinnati, Ohio
REVIEWERS Cara B. Ebbeling, Ph.D. Division of Endocrinology Children’s Hospital Boston, Massachusetts
David S. Ludwig, M.D., Ph.D. Children’s Hospital Boston, Massachusetts
Table of Contents Chapter 1
Clinical Management of Pediatric Obesity: An Overview.........................................1
Dennis M. Styne
SECTION 1 Clinical Management Chapter 2
The Business of Weight Management ........................................................................9
Melinda S. Sothern
SECTION 2 Medical Aspects of Treatment Chapter 3
Medical Complications and Comorbidities of Pediatric Obesity.............................31
Marc S. Jacobson Chapter 4
Medical Aspects of Treatment: The Role of the Physician .....................................41
Stewart T. Gordon
SECTION 3 Psychosocial and Physical Considerations Chapter 5
Psychosocial Considerations during Treatment........................................................55
Jeffrey B. Schwimmer Chapter 6
Weaknesses and Strengths in the Response of the Obese Child to Exercise ..........67
Connie VanVrancken-Tompkins, Melinda S. Sothern, and Oded Bar-Or
SECTION 4 Clinical Evaluation Chapter 7
Clinical Evaluation: Diagnosis, Medical Testing, and Follow-up............................79
Nancy F. Krebs and Melinda S. Sothern Chapter 8
Nutritional Assessment of the At-Risk for Overweight and Overweight Child and Adolescent ..........................................................................................................95
Nancy Copperman
Chapter 9
Behavioral and Psychosocial Assessment Tools.....................................................105
T. Kristian von Almen Chapter 10 Exercise Testing ......................................................................................................113 Thomas Rowland and Mark Loftin
SECTION 5 Dietary Approaches Chapter 11 Pediatric Obesity Dietary Approaches in Clinical Settings: A Survey of the Options and Recommendations....................................................................121 Melinda S. Sothern, Connie VanVrancken-Tompkins, and Lauren Keely Carlisle Chapter 12 Nutrition Education .................................................................................................133 Heidi Schumacher, Connie VanVrancken-Tompkins, and Melinda S. Sothern
SECTION 6 Behavioral Counseling Chapter 13 Behavioral Counseling: Family-Based Behavioral Counseling in Clinical Settings ....................................................................................................................147 Valerie H. Myers and Pamela Davis Martin
SECTION 7 Exercise and Physical Activity Chapter 14 Increasing Physical Activity in Overweight Youth in Clinical Settings ................173 Melinda S. Sothern, Connie VanVrancken-Tompkins, Courtney Brooks, and Camille Thélin Chapter 15 Exercise and Physical Activity: Exercise Training Programs and Metabolic Health ......................................................................................................................189 Scott Owens
SECTION 8 Internet-Based Approaches Chapter 16 Internet-Based Treatment for Pediatric Obesity .....................................................201 Donald A. Williamson, Heather Walden, Emily York-Crowe, and Tiffany M. Stewart
SECTION 9 Pharmacology Chapter 17 Pharmacologic Treatment of Adolescent Obesity ..................................................211 Canice E. Crerand, Thomas A. Wadden, and Robert I. Berkowitz
SECTION 10 Surgery Chapter 18 Surgical Management of Pediatric Obesity ............................................................223 Thomas Inge, Meg Zeller, Shelley Kirk, and Stephen Daniels
SECTION 11 Interdisciplinary, Interactive, Group Instruction Chapter 19 Interdisciplinary, Interactive Group Instruction: Orientation, Evaluation and Monitoring Progress.........................................................................................235 Lauren Keely Carlisle and Stewart T. Gordon Chapter 20 Interdisciplinary, Interactive, Group Instruction.....................................................243 T. Kristian von Almen, Melinda S. Sothern, and Heidi Schumacher Appendix 1 Clinical Management Forms...................................................................................271 Appendix 2 Testing/Measurement Protocols ..............................................................................309 Appendix 3 Sample Intervention Materials ................................................................................323 Index ..............................................................................................................................................393
Management 1 Clinical of Pediatric Obesity: An Overview Dennis M. Styne CONTENTS References ..........................................................................................................................................5 This second volume of this Handbook of Childhood Obesity contains detailed information on all of the approaches to the treatment and management of childhood obesity. This brief introductory chapter aims not to repeat such important information but, rather, to reflect on the role of these approaches in this international epidemic of chronic disease that is occurring as a result of the many factors highlighted in the first volume. Perhaps there is the danger of our becoming desensitized to the remarkable prevalence of pediatric obesity, as we read about this subject daily in the lay or medical press. As shown in volume one, the prevalence of childhood obesity or overweight (defined as BMI [body mass index] ≥ 95th percentile by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) has tripled in the last 20 years to about 31% [1], and the prevalence of those at risk for obesity or at risk for overweight (defined as BMI ≥ 85th < 95th percentile) has increased over 50%, to approximately 26% [1]. Ethnic groups in the U.S. other than Caucasians, i.e., Native Americans, African Americans, Hispanic Americans, and most recently, Asian Americans, are at greater risk than Caucasian Americans, although Caucasians suffer in large numbers as well. These same trends are found around the world with the same rising prevalence. These ethnic tendencies are caused partially by genetic factors and partially by socioeconomic and educational influences. Such health disparities, already well known in the adult population, are more recently recognized in children [2]. Indeed, toddlers are already manifesting remarkable weight gain. Significant political repercussions over and above concerns about the cost to individuals and families in physical and emotional health can arise out of such a situation. Our goals as medical professionals may differ from those of the lay public, and communication may thus suffer. The laity often focuses on a more “acceptable or pleasing” appearance as the goal for the treatment of obesity. They often take aim at unreachable goals fostered by the remarkably slim figures of media stars. Why do health professionals seek to find a treatment for childhood obesity? Metabolic and emotional health (the latter may itself be affected by the social response to appearance) is the focus of these two volumes and of providers of medical care for those who are overweight. We seek as our primary goal to improve metabolic fitness and body composition and to improve health and emotional status, leaving as a secondary goal the loss of weight or, in younger subjects, the control of its velocity of increase. The successful social marketing techniques that have convinced large numbers of U.S. smokers to cease using tobacco focused not primarily on improvement in health and limitation of the damage caused by smoking to lungs, heart, and offspring, as few smokers seemed to be moved by these goals. The successful approach was to take aim at daily habits rather than loftier goals of health. Can we follow such successes in the 1
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Handbook of Pediatric Obesity: Clinical Management
reduction of smoking by limiting the prevalence of obesity? Can we encourage individuals to eat healthier diets and decrease inactivity in a supportive and successful manner rather than by more grim pronouncements of the type that have had little effect in the past? Part of the success of antismoking campaigns was to make the very act of smoking socially unacceptable, and there is no direct parallel in the realm of obesity that can be invoked without targeting obese individuals themselves. We must take care to influence the causes and complications of obesity, but not take aim at the obese individuals themselves, lest those affected be made to feel more marginalized than they feel now. Careful investigation of the understanding and acceptance of our techniques of weight management on the consumer is necessary. For example, we strive to use the euphemistic term “overweight” in place of “obesity” in childhood to limit stigmatization of the latter term. However, there are reports that the public fully understands the term “obesity” but is unclear on the meaning and importance of “overweight.” We have sought to convince a generation of children to eat “5 a day” of vegetables and fruit, but we find that parents label these very foods as “not convenient to eat” (perhaps because they need to be washed and sometimes cut and cooked), and children describe them as “messy” (perhaps because they rot when not eaten) [3]. Now the goal of the U.S. Department of Agriculture has been modified, because of increased clinical insight, before we have even successfully reached our earlier target. We must find what will motivate the population by using social marketing techniques to change their habits to achieve metabolic fitness. Simply preaching exercise and a healthier diet has not worked up to now and is unlikely to be successful alone in the future. Weight acceptance groups speak of being “healthy at any weight”; however, recent studies point out that overweight is itself a risk factor for comorbidities, over and above a lack of fitness [4]. Unfortunately, we cannot yet predict which individual will develop which serious comorbidities as their weight increases. Genetic analysis may ultimately reveal how one individual who has a BMI > 95th percentile does not have diabetes, steatohepatitis, or dyslipidemia, whereas another develops some or all of theses conditions, even though he or she may be thinner. Until such time as these techniques are developed, we have to attend to the general population of obese individuals. The distribution of adiposity in the population is another concern. The distribution of percentiles of BMI values for age of a child has changed over the last two decades [5]. The newest analysis of BMI values for age does not demonstrate a uniform rise in all values compared with past decades. The lower end of the curve of the lowest BMI values for age has remained relatively stable, whereas the upper end of greater BMI values at a given age has become all the more skewed to the right, indicating a greater prevalence of the highest values in recent decades. It is theorized that an individual who 20 years ago would have had a moderately elevated BMI for age (e.g., above the 85th percentile) in today’s world would have a much greater BMI value (e.g., above the 95th percentile) at the same age. This is usually attributed to the effects of today’s environment on a stable genetic tendency for some individuals to gain more weight than others. In contrast, those individuals 20 years age who were close to, or less than, appropriate ideal for age would in today’s world have a modest increase in BMI values, if any increase at all. These data indicate that the entire population may not be at risk for obesity; rather, those who have an innate tendency toward higher BMI values have developed even greater BMI values in this decade, presumably because of the effects of today’s environment. It appears that obesity develops from a certain genetic makeup exposed to an unfortunate environment, so that not all exposed to the environment suffer equally. There is concern about various features of puberty being affected by obesity [6]. Although it is true that the age of menarche in many studies is lower today in girls who have greater BMI values, mathematical modeling shows that the later age of attainment of menarche in girls studied 20 years ago would, if their BMI was adjusted upward to values found more commonly today, have menarche at a younger age today. We can take some grim solace in the data from the latest Health and Nutrition Evaluation Survey (HANES) survey that indicate that the shift to higher BMI values in the United States may be leveling off, albeit at values higher than seen two decades ago.
Clinical Management of Pediatric Obesity: An Overview
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What, then, should be done to approach the epidemic of pediatric obesity? An expert panel proposed that attention should first be directed to those whose standard deviation scores of BMI for age is above the 85th percentile. Second, there should be a determination of whether there is a family history of risk factors or the presence of comorbidities in the child [7]. Weight maintenance was recommended for those without comorbidities who could “grow into their weight” as they became taller, whereas weight loss was indicated for those already too old to allow enough growth in stature, as well as for those with significant comorbidities. The recommendation of referral to an “Obesity Treatment Center” must have seemed to be wishful thinking in 1998 when first published. With increased interest in the problem of obesity, however, many larger medical centers now offer a team approach to the evaluation and treatment of obesity, such as detailed elsewhere in the volume. Having decided who needs to lose or maintain weight as children grow, how shall these goals be accomplished? First, there is consistent agreement among clinicians and researchers that a reasonable diet and level of activity should be reached. No matter what factors are ultimately shown to be the proximate causes of obesity, our stated goals should not awaken controversy in reasonable individuals even if the method to reach these goals is sometimes in question. For example, common sense informs us that highly sweetened beverages and juices increase caloric intake, leading to weight gain; however, although there are compelling data that this is true for sodas, there is less strong evidence that juice consumption has the same effects, even if the caloric content is similar or higher than for soda [8]. Later in the volume, the content of diets (e.g., calories, fat, and carbohydrate) is discussed, but the society of obesity researchers is far from agreement on what modifications should be universal in our attempts to control weight gain. The new discipline of nutrigenomics should give us just such valuable information. Our creative discussions in the scientific community foster confusion — and even disbelief — in the community, at a time when a clear message is all the more important. Perhaps we can at least agree on two statements: fun and safe forms of exercise can be supported by all, and reduced caloric intake in those who consume an excess of calories is a desirable goal. How can we change behavior in our quest to increase activity and consume a reasonable diet? As you will see later in the volume, there are effective societal, group, and individual approaches to the problem. Many use behavior modification in those who demonstrate that they are ready to accept change in their life. However, it is clear that if either the child or the family is not ready to change, no changes will occur. Because of a high rate of recidivism, constant reinforcement is necessary. The recent rewording of the Medicare guidelines that accept obesity as a chronic disease should remind us that some consistent level of attention is required to lose or maintain weight once obesity develops. Others say that our warnings have made adolescents “afraid to eat” and have driven children to unsafe dieting practices, even as we fail to show widespread success of our behavior modification methods [9]. One of our goals in any program is first to “do no harm.” The several-years-long Pathways program addressed the children of the population with the highest prevalence of obesity and its complications — Native Americans. Pathways used the expertise of some of our best researchers to craft a comprehensive curriculum. Still, with such maximal effort, the BMI of the children rose, although much important knowledge was gained through the implementation of the study [10]. This experience further emphasized the difficulty in addressing the problem. We know that family-centered behavior modification therapy for younger children and individual or family-centered therapy for adolescents can be effective [11]. How can we spread such success to a majority of the pediatric population? The cost in personnel of such measures would likely be staggering, given the numbers of overweight and obese children. Although the cost of such a program depends on numerous details, a 10-week program could be carried out for approximately $100 to $600 per child. Cost reductions might be achieved by using proven, standardized techniques; by the use of specially trained “lay” counselors; by incorporating effective curricula, perhaps in the (admittedly overextended) public school system; or by invoking techniques of extending personnel such as telemedicine, whereby a few providers can reach many more subjects.
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These measures can likely be made effective and should be made widely available with adequate support. However, targeted behavior modification techniques could be offered, but the requirement for large numbers of personnel and the expense involved remains an issue. A few medications are available to address obesity, and more are being developed. The best will focus on our basic understanding of the control of appetite and food intake, as well as energy expenditure. However, at the time of this writing, only orlistat is available for subjects as young as 10 years, although there is a likelihood that sibutramine may soon follow suit. Unfortunately, the mean loss of weight using available medications approximates 5 to 8% over what behavior modification or placebo treatment can accomplish alone. These measures may not be adequate to address the problem of children and adolescents who have BMI values over the 97th percentile, as far more than 10% weight loss may be desirable. Still, the loss of 10% weight in adults does improve their elevated lipid levels, their insulin resistance, and other features of obesity, and it may be a reachable and commendable goal in childhood as well. How long shall we treat these children with medications? Present trials rarely exceed a few months, and there are no large studies with long-term results spanning years as yet. Weight loss medications would be taken for many decades if started in childhood. Of course, there are no presently approved medications approved for use over such long periods. Furthermore, studies demonstrate a form of tachyphylaxis, in which the weight loss “reaches a wall,” and weight no longer decreases. Shall we, without adequate study, treat children over four to six decades of their lives with medications? If comorbidities can be reduced in overweight children with moderate weight loss, and if careful study demonstrates longterm safety, perhaps this approach will prove viable, just as insulin or oral hypoglycemic agents are the appropriate treatments for diabetes mellitus over decades. However, once again, the cost for addressing the population will be remarkably high. On the basis of the price of the agents in today’s markets, medical therapy approximates $240 per month, depending on the source. Surgery has, to date, been reported in an anecdotal manner or in small groups of children retrospectively studied [12]. The results of prospective studies are needed, and such studies have already begun. The only proven long-term method of weight control in adults has been bariatric surgery. Perhaps this technique has a role in childhood. First, the long-term safety of these methods must be proven, appropriate bone acquisition and physical (including pubertal) development must be demonstrated, and nutritional status must be evaluated before this approach can be supported. In addition, reports from the adult literature demonstrate the necessity for effective behavior change, as the subject may be able to circumvent the procedure and gain some or all of the weight back. Thus, behavior modification is an essential component to weight loss surgery in children and adolescents. Bariatric surgery programs for youth with comprehensive evaluation and treatment are in progress that will allow the collection of prospective data. The dilemma is that lack of success in changing one’s habits is one reason some of the younger candidates were proposed for surgery initially. Surgery will no doubt be invoked in some young subjects who have substantial, lifethreatening complications of obesity. However, for practical reasons alone, such as cost and personnel requirements, surgery cannot become the common approach to the problem. What should the focus be in the arena of childhood obesity? If we accept the concept that our present epidemic is based on environmental effects exerted on a susceptible genetic predisposition, we must address these environmental issues, as manipulation of genes is not yet possible and may not be desirable. Effective prevention of the development of obesity should be the goal. This is emphasized in the Institute of Medicine’s recent volume, Preventing Childhood Obesity: Health in the Balance, which appropriately emphasizes the importance of prevention of obesity [13]. This volume also lays out goals for industry, government, education, families, and of course, medical professionals. A recent critical review of childhood obesity provides another rich resource of what is known about prevention and treatment of this complex subject [14]. We must find effective methods of turning back the clock to allow children to grow up with BMI values characteristic of past decades as they live in their 21st-century environment. Rather than targeting a portion of the population, the healthy habits that can counteract increased weight
Clinical Management of Pediatric Obesity: An Overview
5
gain must be applied to the entire population. If we are fostering healthy habits of diet and exercise in all, all should benefit. Too often politicians or pundits speak of the individual’s or parent’s responsibility in the development of their obesity, rather than attempting to understand the complex network of social and commercial changes over and above parenting abilities that contribute to this state. Only by applying prevention techniques to all will we reduce or eliminate the social stigma that may develop if we focus only on those who most need to modify their lives with increased activity and a healthy diet. Our goal should be improvement in the habits of the whole population. If we are successful in reducing the portion of the population above the 85th percentile of BMI for age to 15% and above the 95th percentile of BMI for age to 5% by preventative measures, we can then focus our behavior, medial, or invasive techniques on the then smaller numbers needing such interventions. The role of the readers of these volumes extends further than the development of treatment or research programs. Those interested in this field must lend their expertise and voice to the local, state, and national government agencies that need direction as they confront this epidemic. Lay advocacy must be encouraged. Some actions must be taken to foster prevention even if all the results of studies, performed or planned, are not yet completed. We must reach consensus on promising, even if unproven, commonsense techniques if the likelihood of harm is small in approaches. We must translate that knowledge into action. More important, we must, in addition to being researchers and clinicians, be advocates for healthy habits for all. We have seen failure to modify weight gain patterns in large, carefully thought-out, multisite studies that held promise. This only further emphasizes the fact that we have our work cut out for us as we rise to the challenge.
REFERENCES 1. Hedley, A. A., C. L. Ogden, C. L. Johnson, M. D. Carroll, L. R. Curtin, and K. M. Flegal. Prevalence of overweight and obesity among U.S. children, adolescents, and adults, 1999–2002. JAMA, 291(23):2847–2850, 2004. 2. Styne, D. M. Childhood and adolescent obesity. Prevalence and significance. Pediatr Clin North Am. 48:823–854, vii, 2001. 3. Cohen, J. Overweight kids: Why should we care? 2000. California State Library, CRB-00-008. 4. Hu, F. B., W. C. Willett, T. Li, M. J. Stampfer, G. A. Colditz, and J. E. Manson. Adiposity as compared with physical activity in predicting mortality among women. N Engl J Med. 351:2694–2703, 2004. 5. Flegal, K. M. and R. P. Troiano. Changes in the distribution of body mass index of adults and children in the U.S. population. Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord. 24:807–818, 2000. 6. Styne, D. M. Puberty, obesity and ethnicity. Trends Endocrinol Metab. 15:472–478, 2004. 7. Barlow, S. E. and W. H. Dietz. Obesity evaluation and treatment: Expert Committee recommendations. The Maternal and Child Health Bureau, Health Resources and Services Administration and the Department of Health and Human Services. Pediatrics. 102:E29, 1998. 8. Ludwig, D. S., K. E. Peterson, and S. L. Gortmaker. Relation between consumption of sugar-sweetened drinks and childhood obesity: a prospective, observational analysis. Lancet. 357:505–508, 2001. 9. Berg, F. M. Children and Teens Afraid to Eat: Helping Youth in Today’s Weight-Obsessed World, 3rd ed. Healthy Weight Publishing Network, 2001, 352. 10. Caballero, B., T. Clay, S. M. Davis, B. Ethelbah, B. H. Rock, T. Lohman, J. Norman, M. Story, E. J. Stone, L. Stephenson, and J. Stevens. Pathways: a school-based, randomized controlled trial for the prevention of obesity in American Indian schoolchildren. Am J Clin Nutr. 78:1030–1038, 2003. 11. Epstein, L. H., J. N. Roemmich, and H. A. Raynor. Behavioral therapy in the treatment of pediatric obesity. Pediatr Clin North Am. 48:981–993, 2001. 12. Inge, T. H., N. F. Krebs, V. F. Garcia, J. A. Skelton, K. S. Guice, R. S. Strauss et al. Bariatric surgery for severely overweight adolescents: concerns and recommendations. Pediatrics. 114:217–223, 2004. 13. Koplan, J. P., C. T. Liverman, and V. A. Krack, Eds., Committee on Prevention of Obesity in Children and Growth. Preventing Childhood Obesity: Health in the Balance. Institute of Medicine, Washington, DC: The National Academies Press, 2005, 414. 14. Speiser, B. W., M. C. Rudolf, H. Anhalt, C. Camacho-Hubner, F. Chiarelli, A. Eliakim et al. Childhood obesity. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 90(3):1871–1887, 2005.
Section 1 Clinical Management
Business of Weight 2 The Management Melinda S. Sothern CONTENTS Introduction ......................................................................................................................................10 Economic Burden of Pediatric Obesity .................................................................................10 Financial Aspects of Managing Pediatric Obesity in the Clinical Setting............................10 Challenges of Providing Clinical Management of Pediatric Obesity ...................................10 Models for Health Education, Health Promotion and Program Development .....................11 The Planning Process.......................................................................................................................11 Assessing the Needs of Your Target Population....................................................................12 Needs Assessment ......................................................................................................12 Site Analysis ...............................................................................................................13 Learner Analysis.........................................................................................................13 Establishing Goals and Objectives.............................................................................13 Designing Health Promotion Interventions .....................................................................................14 Applying Health Promotion Models and Theories to Practice .............................................14 Marketing................................................................................................................................15 Program Promotion: Getting the Word Out...............................................................16 Implementing a Health Promotion Program ...................................................................................16 Concerns of Implementation ..................................................................................................16 Identification and Allocation of Resources............................................................................17 Personnel.....................................................................................................................17 Space...........................................................................................................................18 Scheduling ..................................................................................................................18 Intervention Materials, Equipment, and Supplies......................................................18 Financial Resources....................................................................................................19 Preparing a Budget .....................................................................................................20 Pediatric Weight Management Program: Step-by-Step Instructions .....................................20 Referral from Pediatrician, Family Physician, or Phone Inquiry..............................20 Parent Information Session and Registration.............................................................21 History and Physical ..................................................................................................21 Patient Screening ........................................................................................................21 Assign Participants to the Appropriate Treatment.....................................................22 Orientation ..................................................................................................................22 Baseline Evaluation ....................................................................................................22 Initial Lesson ..............................................................................................................23 Intervention Classes....................................................................................................23 Quarterly Evaluation Follow-Up................................................................................23 Awards, Graduation, New Goals................................................................................23
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Evaluating a Health Promotion Program.........................................................................................24 Evaluation Approaches ...........................................................................................................24 Results and Reporting ............................................................................................................24 Summary ..........................................................................................................................................24 References ........................................................................................................................................25
INTRODUCTION ECONOMIC BURDEN
OF
PEDIATRIC OBESITY
The economic burden of obesity-associated illness during childhood has increased threefold from 35 to 127 million in the last two decades [1,2]. Costs of diseases associated with obesity, including diabetes mellitus, hypertension, heart disease, stroke, gout, arthritis, and cancer, exceed 100 billion dollars per year in the United States, or about 8% of the national health care budget [3]. Insulin resistance, a precursor to type 2 diabetes, has been documented in approximately 25 to 46% [4,5] of overweight adolescents. In one study, 4% of overweight youth had silent type 2 diabetes [4]. In a recent study, it was noted that because of the obesity-related increase in type 2 diabetes, parents of the present generation may outlive their children [6].
FINANCIAL ASPECTS
OF
MANAGING PEDIATRIC OBESITY
IN THE
CLINICAL SETTING
The cost to treat overweight children in clinical settings varies by location, staff expertise, and level of medical care that is provided. Typically, parents bear the burden of cost [7,8]. The few studies available indicate that group treatment programs are more cost-effective than mixed (individual plus group) therapy [9]. In addition, the use of school-based nutrition and physical activity intervention is far less expensive than the cost associated with clinical management and, more important, than the estimated costs associated with adult obesity later in life [2]. Otherwise, there is little information that details the cost of providing clinical treatment to overweight children. In 1992, Spielman and colleagues [10] reported that the costs to the patient of adult outpatient weight loss programs range from approximately $108 to $2120 per 12-week session. In another study, conducted in 1980, the cost to provide treatment to overweight adults was quoted as $19.05 to $131.20 per week per patient [11]. Cost variations were primarily associated with food products and individual versus group counseling expenses [12]. Surveys of available adult weight loss programs indicate that the costs related to reducing weight by 5 to 10%, the amount recommended to gain health benefits, are reasonable and affordable for most individuals [10]. For many families, the cost of treating obesity is a burden that limits the ability to adhere to dietary recommendations, particularly when it comes to food purchases. This financial burden explains why less disposable income is spent on food, such as lean meats, fish, fresh vegetables, and fruit [13–15]. This is consistent with many studies that believe that more money is needed to attain a healthy diet [13–16]. On the contrary, there is evidence that shows that healthy diets do not increase costs over time [17]. In a study of family-based obesity treatment, the costs of adopting a nutrient-dense diet did not change at 6 months and, in fact, considerably decreased after 1 year, from $6.77 to $5.04 per 1000 kcal of food consumed. A possible explanation for this decrease is that although families purchased more fruits and vegetables, they did not purchase snack food; therefore, the overall food bill decreased [17]. Further research is needed to determine whether these findings can be replicated for their beneficial results. Financial considerations of promoting physical activity and medications costs are also lacking in research.
CHALLENGES
OF
PROVIDING CLINICAL MANAGEMENT
OF
PEDIATRIC OBESITY
In most cases, pediatric obesity is the result of overeating and underactivity. Most scientists and clinicians believe that early intervention addressing these factors, along with family guidance to
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11
promote healthy lifestyles, is the key to the successful management of pediatric obesity [18]. The pediatric obesity scientific literature presents strong arguments for encouraging methods to prevent the onset of obesity in youth [19–22]. Unfortunately, for the 10 million children in the United States who are already classified as overweight, prevention is not an option [23]. There are, of course, many challenges to providing weight management interventions to these overweight children, including financial and time limitations. That said, there are also many well-designed studies that document successful weight loss, improvement of chronic disease factors, and long-term weight maintenance in overweight children [24,25]. Cost-effective, targeted family-based dietary and physical activity interventions are available [22]. Physician-supervised individual and group programs that use quality, clinically proven, and scientifically tested approaches should be encouraged for the treatment of pediatric obesity. Many common barriers to providing such treatment can be addressed through education, careful planning, and the application of sound implementation strategies [26].
MODELS FOR HEALTH EDUCATION, HEALTH PROMOTION AND PROGRAM DEVELOPMENT Systematic planning models should be consulted before beginning the process of organizing a weight management program. Popular health promotion models include the Predisposing, Reinforcing, and Enabling constructs in Educational/Ecological Diagnosis and Evaluation (PRECEDE)–Policy, Regulatory, and Organizational Constructs in Educational and Environmental Development (PROCEED) model, the Multilevel Approach to Community Health (MATCH) model, the Social Marketing Assesment and Response Tool (SMART), and others [27]. Green and Kreuter [28] detail the PRECEDE-PROCEED model, which was developed over two decades. There are nine phases of this model, which begin with a detailed assessment of social, epidemiological, behavioral, and environmental factors related to the target population. Educational, ecological, and administrative and policy factors are also reviewed. It is only after careful consideration and study of these factors that planners then select the methods and strategies required for implementation of the health promotion program [28]. The MATCH model was developed for use in community settings [29]. It is a multilevel approach that begins with goals selection and intervention planning and places less emphasis on the assessment of target audience needs [30]. Consumer-based planning requires a different approach and uses health communication skills to influence perceptions, social norms, and awareness. SMART is a social marketing planning framework composed of seven phases including consumer analysis, market analysis, and channel analysis [31,32]. SMART is a useful model to refer to when analyzing the needs of the target audience and during the planning of the marketing phase of weight management interventions.
THE PLANNING PROCESS Perhaps the most significant step in the planning process is enlisting the support of the organization’s administration and decision makers [27]. This requires precise and accurate information concerning the specific health problem, a careful analysis of the needs of the target population, and the identification of common values and benefits. In the case of pediatric obesity treatment, studies indicate that the public, in general, recognizes that pediatric obesity is a significant health problem and is very supportive of interventions to reduce weight in youth [33]. Of particular interest to the public are school-, community-, and media-based approaches that increase healthy nutrition and physical activity. Although the family environment was not considered, 91% of study respondents felt that parents were most responsible for reducing overweight conditions in childhood [33]. This indicates, at least in part, support for family-based educational interventions. The argument of a reduction in heath care costs is often used to promote pediatric weight management programs to decision makers and high-level administration. As stated earlier, obesityrelated chronic diseases significantly affect health care costs not only during childhood [2,4] but also later, during adulthood [3,34,35]. However, a link must be established between the pediatric
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Handbook of Pediatric Obesity: Clinical Management
obesity risk factors that the intervention will modify and the medical expenditures associated with those risks specifically [36]. Wang and colleagues [2] conducted an economic analysis of a schoolbased program, Planet Health, to assess the cost effectiveness and cost benefit of preventing obesity in youth. They estimated intervention costs to be approximately $14.00 per child and illustrated that if only 2% of children were prevented from developing obesity, the total savings to society would be $7300 per child. These types of analysis are suggested for use in influencing federal and state level health care decision makers [37]. However, many organizations favor programs that promote health care reductions in the short term. Often it is difficult to “sell” downstream benefits to decision makers, and ultimately, the cost to modify behaviors that lower health risks must clearly be below the cost of later treatment [36]. Another approach to gaining the support of decision makers is the presentation of successful program outcomes, both locally and nationally [27]. There are a few studies that demonstrate successful weight loss outcome in individual primary care settings [38–40]. However, the shortterm benefits of multidisciplinary treatment programs including dietary, exercise, and behavioral counseling intervention for overweight youth are well established [41–50] (see Appendix A3.1.1). In Chapter 13 of this volume, Martin and Myers detail the results of successful pediatric weight management programs over the last two decades.
ASSESSING
THE
NEEDS
OF
YOUR TARGET POPULATION
Needs Assessment The needs assessment determines the health problems of a specific population [51] and what action will resolve the problem. Data can be collected from secondary sources, such as scientific literature searches and government statistics, or from primary sources, such as surveys, focus groups, or observations. Secondary data on the prevalence and progression of pediatric obesity are abundant. Nationally published statistics and reference material may be used to establish program need (see Appendix A3.1.2). For example, the prevalence of obesity in children and adolescents is higher than 20 years ago in all ethnic, age, and gender groups [52–54]. Over 11% of these children are considered overweight or obese, defined as greater than the 95th percentile for age and height (U.S. Centers for Disease Control Body Mass Index Percentiles) [55], and children are becoming obese at younger ages [56]. The prevalence of obesity in teenagers has tripled in the past 40 years. Additional prevalence data and advocacy information can be found in Chapter 1 of this volume by Styne. The research literature clearly establishes a link between pediatric obesity and a multitude of health problems. This information may be used to further establish the need for the creation of a pediatric weight management program. For example, the escalating rates of adolescent obesity will affect the future health of Americans [57,58]. According to the U.S. Surgeon General, risk factors for heart disease, such as high cholesterol and high blood pressure, occur with increased frequency in overweight children and adolescents compared with children with a healthy weight. At present, 80% of children diagnosed with Blount disease and 50 to 70% of those with slipped capital femoral epiphyses are significantly overweight [1]. There is an 80% correlation between obesity and a very serious neurological disorder called Pseudotumor cerebri. Type 2 diabetes, previously considered an adult disease, has increased dramatically in children and adolescents. Overweight and obesity are closely linked to type 2 diabetes, which has increased 10-fold between 1982 and 1994. Refer to Chapter 3 by Jacobson for more information on the medical complications of childhood obesity. An example of primary data collection can be found in a recent study by Roux and colleagues [59]. They applied a method called the Discrete Choice Experiment to evaluate a monetary measure of benefit, willingness to pay, to overweight individuals seeking treatment. The willingness to pay factors considered most valuable to consumers were accessibility, individualized or tailored approach specific to their needs, and comprehensive program (including diet, self management, and exercise). Although an adult study, results could be considered in the planning of pediatric weight management programs because it is the parents of overweight children who typically make financial decisions
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13
with regard to medical treatment. Service needs and demands must both be considered. Thus, when acquiring needs assessment data, primary source information from the target population is equally as critical as that provided by the planner’s survey of secondary sources. Site Analysis As was stated earlier, in adults, one of the most desirable factors in seeking weight management treatment is convenience [59]. Selecting a site for treatment that is within easy reach of families may be important. Care must be taken to ensure that the site has sufficient space and equipment to facilitate the delivery of quality care. Specific space requirements for conducting a pediatric weight management program are detailed in the “Identification and Allocation of Resources” section later in this chapter. Learner Analysis Participants who should be considered eligible for pediatric weight management programs are children ranging in age from 5 to 17 years. Their parents will typically range in age from 25 to 55 years. Participants will be referred to the program by physicians or other health care professionals or may be self-referred after learning of the program through the media. The overweight level of the patients will range from greater than the 85th to greater than the 99th percentile BMI (body mass index; Appendix A1.10). If the program is a private endeavor requiring a self payment, the participants will most likely be from middle- to upper-socioeconomic status households. Government-assisted programs will likely enroll youth from lower-socioeconomic status households. The participants may be from a variety of ethnic backgrounds. For the purposes of designing the program materials for readability, it is usually safe to assume an average eighth-grade level of education for the parents. Because the children range in age from 7 to 17 years, the materials targeting the children should be developed specifically for each age group — elementary, middle, and high school. The participants’ knowledge base of medicine, nutrition, physical fitness, and psychology may be low and obtained primarily from television, radio, and print media and from elementary school courses. For most participants, this may be the first time they have had experience in a formal, medically supervised multidisciplinary setting. The participants will likely arrive at the pediatric weight management program with many misconceptions about health, nutrition, exercise, and appropriate child development. Establishing Goals and Objectives The goals of a pediatric weight management program are to establish an outpatient clinical service to manage pediatric obesity; to provide a quality medical, nutritional, psychosocial, and physical activity/exercise educational intervention to the overweight child or adolescent along with the entire family; to coordinate the clinical intervention with ongoing medical care and research; and to periodically evaluate the intervention and testing methods to improve program quality and effectiveness. Specific objectives for patients are as follows: (1) children and adolescents completing the pediatric weight management program will become motivated to adopt specific behaviors associated with long-term emotional, physical, and psychological health; (2) from a medical perspective, children will learn to identify safe and effective methods for achieving and maintaining weight loss; (3) concerning nutrition, children will acquire knowledge of the basic principles of sound nutrition and healthy eating patterns; (4) in the realm of behavior modification, children will become aware of their eating behaviors and activity patterns and will learn alternate behaviors to promote long-term health; and (5) in terms of physical activity and exercise, children will gain the physiologic and kinesthetic awareness necessary to adopt activity patterns that promote long-term health. The main objective of treatment is to improve eating patterns and increase daily energy expenditure to maintain an existing healthy weight; to stabilize the existing weight while growing,
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Handbook of Pediatric Obesity: Clinical Management
TABLE 2.1 Suggested Objectives of Pediatric Weight Management Program Children Children Children Children Children
will will will will will
Nutrition Education classify foods into the basic food groups. understand their healthy body weight for age and height. accurately measure foods and calculate caloric and fat content. identify foods high in calories, sugar, and saturated fat. analyze food labels and menus.
Children Children Children Children
will will will will
Behavior Modification improve their self-esteem, self-efficacy, and self-control. reduce anxiety and depression associated with obesity. recognize techniques to alter eating behaviors to promote and maintain weight loss and health. identify positive behaviors associated with long-term health.
Exercise and Fitness Children will identify the basic components of fitness. Children will identify the types of exercise appropriate to achieving a healthy body weight. Children will become aware of body parts and movements that facilitate the acquisition of a balanced, well-trained, and healthy physique. Children will increase daily activity levels and, therefore, increase daily energy expenditure. Children will maintain or increase lean muscle tissue. Children will improve muscular strength and endurance. Children will improve cardiorespiratory endurance. Children will improve muscular flexibility. Children will gain vigor and an overall feeling of well-being.
until a healthy weight is achieved; or to reduce body weight to a healthy level. Specific medical objectives include maintaining or achieving a body weight that corresponds with ≤ 85th percentile BMI, and a reduction in total cholesterol, triglycerides, and percentage body fat while maintaining normal biochemical parameters, thus significantly reducing the present and future risk of chronic disease. Specific nutrition education, behavior modification, and physical activity/exercise objectives are outlined in Table 2.1.
DESIGNING HEALTH PROMOTION INTERVENTIONS APPLYING HEALTH PROMOTION MODELS
AND
THEORIES
TO
PRACTICE
It is vital that pertinent models and theories are used when designing health promotion programs. There are numerous health promotion theories and models that have been applied to the planning and implementation of pediatric intervention programs. In Chapters 5, 14, and 20, Schwimmer, Sothern, and von Almen provide detailed descriptions and thorough literature reviews of studies that have successfully incorporated these models and theories. Once an appropriate model or theory has been selected to meet the established goals and objectives, the design of the intervention can begin. Program planners should consider the results of the needs assessment and the different types of intervention activities [51]. They should also refer to standardized guidelines published by public health, medical, research, and educational institutions to ensure that the intervention will be safe, credible, and ethical [19,24,60,61]. There are hundreds of well-established, well-studied programs available for increasing physical activity and promoting healthy nutrition (see Appendix A3.1.1, A3.1.2, and A3.1.3). Many of these programs target children at risk for developing obesity and those who are already considered overweight. Sometimes it may be more advantageous to consider implementing an existing program or adapting the program components of these interventions to
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15
the specific needs of your population. In all cases, be aware of the existing copyright and trademark requirements associated with each program.
MARKETING The current pediatric epidemic is neither the fault nor the responsibility of any one single sector of society [22]. There are several areas to consider when attempting to change public opinion and behavior concerning healthy nutrition and physical activity. There are five major target areas that can be identified (Table 2.2) [22]. The marketing of these various segments is part of a step-by-step process called audience or market segmentation [27]. This type of marketing approach helps to ensure that programs are specific to the needs of the target consumer group. Consumers typically want to know primarily whether weight management interventions are safe [62]. Second, they seek specific information concerning the type of diet used, a description of the behavior modification component, and the cost. Surprisingly, in one study, the credentials of the staff were not considered important by consumers seeking commercial weight loss treatment [62]. This information is valuable when designing promotions and advertising strategies for weight management programs. There are no specific
TABLE 2.2 Target Areas — Obesity Prevention in Children Family and Home Environment Parental education and awareness Neighborhood safety Public Educators, Administrators, and School Environment Cafeteria Physical education Academic classroom After school and recess Nonfood incentives for academic achievement and positive behavior Health Care (obstetricians, pediatricians, family physicians, dietitians, psychologists, exercise and related health care professionals) Patient education Monitoring of high-risk populations Referral system Prevention and treatment programs Maintenance and relapse prevention programs. Public Policy Insurance and governmental reimbursement for medical evaluation, monitoring prevention, treatment, and maintenance programs Food labeling and packaging (portion control) School nutrition and physical activity policy (cafeteria, vending machines, unstructured physical activity periods [recess], physical education class, limits on homework, grants and funds to schools that promote a healthy school environment) Work site policy (flex time, home offices, family and medical leave) Youth media and marketing Increased funding for childhood overweight research Public Awareness Community programs Promotions and social marketing campaigns Source: With permission, Sothern, M. S. Obesity prevention in children: physical activity and nutrition. Nutrition, 20:704–708, 2004.
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Handbook of Pediatric Obesity: Clinical Management
studies addressing the needs and concerns of parents of overweight children. Thus, careful application of information gathered from the needs assessment should be included in the marketing process. Next, it is important to develop informative and persuasive communication flows [27]. Several questions must first be answered: What are the costs of treatment versus the worth? Will the message reach a large proportion of the parents of overweight children? If so, how frequently should it be delivered, and through which channels? Planners should consider the type of product that will meet the needs of the largest proportion of overweight children. They should first determine who is most likely going to pay for the program [27]. Typically, third-party payer reimbursement rates for the treatment of pediatric obesity are very low [8]. Therefore, planners may need to consider a selfpay program, in which case it will be the parents who are responsible for the costs of the pediatric weight management program. “Selling” the program to parents may be quite challenging, especially if they are also overweight. Moreover, adults report that they support school and community intervention for the prevention and treatment of pediatric obesity, which may indirectly indicate a lack of support for programs that target the home environment [33]. Program Promotion: Getting the Word Out The participants who successfully complete the weight management program provide “word-ofmouth” advertising and promotion; however, if you are just starting up a program in your area, you will need to let the community know about your services. You should develop two brochures, one aimed at parents and another at referring physicians. Consider the information obtained in your needs assessment when drafting the text for the brochure. The brochures should include details of your program, location, and fees. You may choose to develop and mail a quarterly newsletter to your patients, along with notices of upcoming special events. As the successes of the program accumulate, the local newspapers, magazines, and radio and television reporters, along with institutional public relations departments, may want to offer feature articles on your patients’ progress.
IMPLEMENTING A HEALTH PROMOTION PROGRAM There are several implementation strategies, including pilot programming, preliminary field testing, and phasing-in approaches [27]. Experienced planners do not recommend a total implementation approach. Rather, a pilot or preliminary test is preferred to gain primary data from participants for the purpose of revising and tailoring the intervention, and to provide marketing information. Borg and Gall’s Research and Development Cycle provides a sound, systematic plan to health promotion program implementation that details the use of pilot testing [63].
CONCERNS
OF IMPLEMENTATION
Several medical, legal, and ethical issues must be considered before program implementation. Safety is the primary concern [65,66]. Thorough preliminary testing, along with careful review of the existing medical literature, will ensure that the components of the program are sound. Regardless, interventionists must do everything to reduce the risk of liability associated with treatment. Informed consent must be obtained from the patient and his or her parents [65,66], medical concerns related to the treatment of obesity must be documented [67,68], and staff must be licensed, degreed, and certified professionals who are well trained in all aspects of treatment, including testing and interpersonal skills [69]. These are often standard practices in clinical settings. However, if parts of the program will be delivered outside of the physician’s office, care must be taken to ensure that related personnel and sites are well-prepared and safe. Another concern is sufficient preparation time. Recruiting and training staff, ordering equipment, and marketing takes weeks and often months in large organizations. A suggested timeline for successful implementation is presented in Table 2.3.
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17
TABLE 2.3 Pediatric Weight Management Implementation Flow Chart Time before First Orientation, days 210 180 150 120 90 60
45 21 14 7
IDENTIFICATION
AND
Action Recruit staff and select intervention site Attend Pediatric Weight Management Professional Training (Appendix A3.1.1) Staff meeting to review testing and intervention techniques Begin media campaign Order supplies and equipment Mail out physician, school, and community center advertising letters Mail public service announcements introducing program in your area Establish patient/parent communication system Answer phone and mail inquiries Mail out information brochures as necessary Enroll and register new patients Begin screening of new patients Mail public service announcement for community/parent information session Continue screening and enrollment of new patients Community/parent information session Continue screening and enrollment of new patients Continue screening and enrollment of new patients Staff meeting to finalize intervention schedule Review intervention materials Finalize class roster Begin media campaign for next session
ALLOCATION
OF
RESOURCES
Personnel Organization of the Pediatric Weight Management Program Staff At the center of the pediatric weight management program is the family (Figure 2.1). A family physician or pediatrician leads the team as the medical director. He or she provides medical supervision and guidance for the clinic, performs medical history and physical examinations, and conducts educational sessions on the medical aspects of the program. The remaining staff members include a registered dietician, a behavior specialist, an exercise specialist, and the clinic coordinator. The registered dietitian provides nutritional supervision and guidance for the clinic, conducts weekly Clinical management of pediatric obesity Pediatrician
Behavioral counseling
Family
Nutrition education
Exercise and physical activity
FIGURE 2.1 Organization of the pediatric weight management program staff.
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Handbook of Pediatric Obesity: Clinical Management
educational sessions on nutrition topics, and instructs patients in the proper administration of the clinic diet. A dietician with experience in the pediatric setting is desirable. The exercise specialist provides exercise supervision and guidance and conducts weekly educational sessions on the physical fitness aspects of pediatric obesity. The exercise specialist should be a degreed professional with experience in adapting exercise to children of all ages. The behavior specialist provides instruction in behavior-modification skills and techniques and conducts weekly educational sessions on the psychosocial aspects of obesity in children. The behavior specialist should be a degreed and licensed counselor or psychologist with experience in family therapy. The clinic coordinator supervises patient scheduling and billing for the program and is responsible for day-to-day office and program functions. It is recommended that the coordinator be experienced in health care management. He or she supervises the secretary-receptionist, who provides clerical support for the clinic and is responsible for communicating with parents and patients. The coordinator also oversees the distribution of information about the clinic to prospective clients, as well as news of upcoming events (see Table 2.3). A sample job description for pediatric weight management clinical coordinator may be found in the Appendix A1.1. Space The minimal space requirements to conduct a multidisciplinary intervention in a clinical setting for 10 to 15 families are as follows: meeting room (500 sq. ft.), exercise room (800 sq. ft.), patient examination rooms (2 @ 200 sq. ft.), kitchen or nutrition demonstration area (500 sq. ft.), and clinic waiting area (500 sq. ft.) Suggested sites for pediatric clinical management programs include hospitals, medical centers, and wellness/fitness centers. The following sites may be used for the delivery of the educational intervention in conjunction with a family physician or pediatrician office: community centers, church activity centers, school auditoriums/cafeterias, recreation centers, and reception halls. Scheduling If there is a large amount of meeting space in the facility, staff expenses can be reduced by scheduling several different groups of families during the same clinic interval. This strategy makes the most efficient use of the clinicians’ time, which is especially desirable when part-time clinicians are paid on an hourly basis. However, if full-time staff are employed, but meeting space is limited, several groups can be scheduled into separate clinic intervals, whereby the program is offered several times per day on several days per week. This strategy most fully employs existing full-time staff, with the additional advantage of smaller intervention groups. In all cases, if different groups of families are conducted during one clinic interval, there should be at least a 10- to 20-minute interval of time when all of the members of the intervention team are conducting the session together. This is the time during which the “team” approach is greatly reinforced. Researchers attribute much of the success of multidisciplinary pediatric weight management programs to the peer support and counseling the kids receive during these integrated, interactive, multidisciplinary sessions [49,50,70]. A sample pediatric weight management class schedule may be found in Table 2.4. If there are more than two groups of families attending clinic at the same time, the intervention clinicians can alternate between groups during the session (Table 2.5). A blank schedule may be found in Appendix A1.2. Intervention Materials, Equipment, and Supplies The intervention materials, equipment, and supplies required to deliver a pediatric weight management program can be classified in four different categories: clinical administration, educational, incentive, and marketing. Clinical administration materials include patient charts, record forms, growth charts, etc. and equipment and supplies that are necessary to conduct a medical examination and obesity evaluation (Appendix A1). Refer to the testing protocol in Appendix 2 for descriptions
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19
TABLE 2.4 Pediatric Weight Management Sample Class Schedule Time
Medicine
Nutrition
4:00-4:30
Behavior
Exercise
Return calls, set up
4:30-4:45
Nurse supervises weigh-in
Check food records
Talk with parents, review charts
Check exercise cards
4:45-5:00
Accomplishments
Accomplishments
Accomplishments
Accomplishments
5:00-5:30
Review charts
Nutrition session
Return calls, review charts
Review charts, return calls
5:30-6:00
Physician Q&A or session
Clean up
Behavior session
Set up, exercise
6:00-6:30
Physician Q&A or session
6:30-7:00
Clean up
Exercise session Clean up
Clean up
Clean up
TABLE 2.5 Pediatric Weight Management Class Schedule — Two groups Time
Medicine
Nutrition
Behavior
Exercise
4:00-4:30
Set up
Set up
Set up
Set up
4:30-4:50
Nurse supervises weigh-in
Check food records
Talk with parents, review charts, return calls
Check exercise cards
4:50-5:00
Accomplishments
Accomplishments
Accomplishments
Accomplishments
5:00-5:30
Physician Q&A or session
Nutrition education, group 1
Behavior session, group 2 Set-up, exercise
5:30-6:00
Review charts, return calls
Behavior session, group 1 Exercise session, group 2
6:00-6:30
Nutrition education, group 2
6:30-7:00
Clean up
Clean up
Exercise session, group 1 Clean up
Clean up
Note: The intervention clinicians will alternate between groups during the clinic.
of suitable equipment. Educational materials include books, self-monitoring forms, handouts, pamphlets, and so on. Appendix A3 provides a list of resources for pediatric weight management educational materials and sample handouts and self-monitoring forms. Educational equipment and supplies may include audiovisual items, flip charts, and props for modeling sessions, exercise aids, and games (see Appendix A3). Incentives for participants should be healthy, nonfood items. For example, sports equipment and active play games promote increased physical activity and are typically well-received by program participants. Marketing materials should be developed for your individual program. This is discussed in more detail earlier in this chapter. However, there are dozens of national resource centers that provide, often free of charge, items to assist you with promoting your program (see Appendix A3.1.2). Financial Resources Funding remains the greatest barrier to successful implementation of pediatric weight management programs. Even though there is a consistent message of concern regarding pediatric obesity in the media, clinical weight management programs receive minimal federal funding [7], are often not reimbursed by insurance companies or other third parties [8], and lack understanding by the general
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Handbook of Pediatric Obesity: Clinical Management
TABLE 2.6 Sample 1-Year, Weekly Outpatient Pediatric Weight Management Budget Income Patient fees (40 children @ $40/wk [48 wks]) Insurance/government payments Other (sponsors, contributions, grants) Total income Expenses Intervention staff (4 @ $4,992/year [based on $104/session] @ 48 weekly sessions) Blood Tests (40 @ [baseline and 12 weeks] @ $650) Physician examination fees (40 @ $350) Educational supplies (40 @ $200) Total expenses
$76,800 * **17,168 $93,968
$19,968 52,000 14,000 8,000 $93,968
* Varies by state, company, and location. ** Amount of additional funding required if medical insurance or government funding is not available.
public [33]. Unless you are able to engage the support of decision makers to provide funding for treatment, you will need to survey the financial resources that are available. The first step in this process is the development of a budget. Preparing a Budget Sponsors ultimately want to know the “bottom line” of pediatric weight management. Will the costs to deliver such a service outweigh the proposed funding? A carefully planned budget will consider the various sources of income, including participant fees, grants, insurance reimbursement, and contributions [27]. Expenses will include personnel, space, medical testing, intervention materials, supplies, marketing, and travel. Table 2.6 describes a typical 1-year budget for a pediatric weight management program enrolling approximately 10 families per session. Carefully consider any additional income sources or expenses specific to your institution before finalizing your budget.
PEDIATRIC WEIGHT MANAGEMENT PROGRAM: STEP-BY-STEP INSTRUCTIONS The pediatric weight management program (Table 2.7) emphasizes lifestyle adjustment through behavioral modification of activity level, eating patterns, and family and personal thoughts and attitudes. Only one study, by Saelens and colleagues [38], evaluated the posttreatment and shortterm follow-up efficacy of a 4-month behavioral weight control program for overweight adolescents in a primary care setting. The results indicated that a physician-based, individual counseling program including nutrition and physical activity education was superior to a standard care approach in overweight teenagers. However, over 40 evidence-based studies using a multidisciplinary, familybased intervention have been published to date [24]. This multidisciplinary approach has produced some of the most promising results to date in the treatment of pediatric obesity. This section of the chapter provides the supporting materials you will need to implement a group, family-based, multidisciplinary pediatric weight management program that effectively serves the needs of overweight children and adolescents ages 5 to 17 years. Referral from Pediatrician, Family Physician, or Phone Inquiry In step 1, the receptionist discusses the program in detail with parents and referring physicians who have telephoned, inquiring about the program. It is helpful to have a basic information sheet to
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TABLE 2.7 Pediatric Weight Management Program: Step-by-Step Instructions Step
Action Item
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
Referral from pediatrician or family physician. Community/parent information session and registration (optional) History and physical Patient screening Assign patients to the appropriate treatment Orientation session Initial evaluation Initial lesson Intervention classes Follow-up evaluation Registration for incoming participants Awards, graduation, new goals
assist the receptionist. He or she fills in the Phone Screening and Information Form (Appendix A1.3) and the Physician Referral Form (Appendix A1.4) completely. These forms are then placed into a collated patient file. A cover letter, program brochure, and Registration Form (Appendix A1.5) are mailed to the patient’s address. As a courtesy, program diet and exercise instructions may be mailed to the referring physician also. The patient’s insurance company or referring physician is contacted at this time for precertification. Parent Information Session and Registration Two to 3 weeks before the orientation meeting the staff may conduct a 1-hour information session to attract new patients. Media announcements should be mailed at least 2 weeks before the information session. The session may consist of staff introduction, a formal presentation, and a 15-minute question-and-answer session. The session is detailed in full in Chapter 19 by Carlisle and Gordon. Registration forms should be available, and parents may choose to register and pay the appropriate fees at this time or complete at home and mail to the center. History and Physical After receiving the completed registration form and fee deposit from the parent, the receptionist schedules the patient for an appointment with the staff pediatrician or the referring physician. The Medical History and Physical Examination Form (Appendix A1.6), located in the patient file, is completed by the family and the staff pediatrician during this visit. The Clearance Form (Appendix A1.7) is filled in and put into the file, and the file is given back to the receptionist. The receptionist mails the Program Information Letter (Appendix A1.8) and telephones the patient to give instructions. Patient Screening The staff psychologist meets with the family and completes the Initial Parent Questionnaire (Appendix A1.9), which should be located in the patient file. This can be done at the same time as the physical examination or in a separate meeting. However, this must be done before the orientation meeting. The staff dietitian uses the height and weight variables obtained at the physical examination to plot the patient on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention BMI percentiles also to be housed in the patient file. He or she calculates the BMI and overweight status using the BMI percentiles (Appendix A1.10).
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Handbook of Pediatric Obesity: Clinical Management
TABLE 2.8 Weight Level Level Level Level Level Level
Status I II III IV
Severely overweight Overweight At risk for overweight Healthy weight
Percentile >99th >95th >85th ≤85th
BMI BMI BMI BMI
BMI = body mass index.
Assign Participants to the Appropriate Treatment Using the Weight Level Form (Table 2.8) and the calculations made by the clinic dietitian of percent overweight (refer to the BMI percentile in the Patient File), the child is assigned to a class roster form in the appropriate level. The receptionist will then mail the parents a letter and telephone them to give the date and the time of the clinic meeting. Orientation The orientation meeting is attended by all the weight management staff members, the patients, and their families. Patients’ files should be available. The receptionist should prepare extra patient files and information packets with registration forms for late registrants. Educational materials are handed to each family as they arrive and sign in, provided they are registered and have paid the deposit. The medical or program director introduces the weight management staff and begins the presentation. The other staff members may participate. The Orientation Handout (Appendix A1.11) is discussed. The Class Schedule (Appendix A1.13) and Test Preparation Letter (Appendix A1.16) are distributed and discussed. The clinic coordinator should use the Orientation Checklist (Appendix A1.12) to ensure that all procedures are performed. The orientation session is discussed in more detail in Chapter 19 by Carlisle and Gordon. Baseline Evaluation The initial evaluation session follows the orientation meeting. Weight management staff members should arrive at least 30 minutes before meeting time to set up. Refer to the Evaluation Station Checklist (Appendix A1.18) to direct the staff members to their measurement stations. It is recommended that each station be set up in a separate clinic room. Each patient is then given his or her patient file as he or she reports to the weight and height station. The Evaluation Form (Appendix A1.19) should be located in the patient file. This information will be used to complete the Evaluation Results Form (Appendix A1.20), which will be given to the parents during the next class. The patient then carries the file from one station to the next as the measurements are acquired and recorded. The patients should be directed to stop at the checkout desk before departure, where the clinic coordinator will fill out the final Evaluation Checklist (Appendix A1.17). The evaluation forms are then removed from the patient files and given to the coordinator for processing. After the baseline evaluation, the coordinator will schedule a separate meeting for each patient to participate in a Fitness Evaluation (Appendix A1.21). This can be done before the baseline evaluation, after physician clearance. Detailed protocols for the baseline testing procedures are located in Appendix 2. The staff members should be adequately trained before the baseline evaluation. Staff members should review the clinic testing protocols (Appendix 2) and extensively practice the measurement techniques.
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Initial Lesson The initial lesson begins with individual weigh-in and medical monitoring. Approximately 20 to 30 minutes is needed for up to 15 patients. Refer to the Weekly Clinic Checklist (Appendix A1.14) to ensure that all procedures are completed. Use the Weight Record and Vital Signs Chart (Appendix A1.15) to record the patient’s weight and vital signs. Following this period, the patients and their families sit, auditorium style, with all four clinicians in the front of the room. The behavior specialist leads a discussion of each patient’s accomplishments, including weight loss, for the past week, as well as since the patient began the program. Accomplishments such as trying new vegetables or a new exercise activity are also recognized and discussed. Clinicians lead applause after each patient’s accomplishment. This period lasts approximately 20 to 30 minutes. Positive reinforcement of healthy eating and exercise behaviors is crucial to the success of the program during this period. Diet instruction follows for the next 45 to 60 minutes, including questions from the patients and the parents. If time permits, and if they are available, the results of the baseline evaluations may be discussed; otherwise, this discussion can be done during lesson 2. The exercise educational materials are briefly discussed by the exercise physiologist. The behavior specialist briefly discusses self monitoring. Intervention Classes Intervention lessons follow the same general format as lesson 1, which describes a typical setting. However, in lessons 2 through 9, nutrition, behavior, and exercise sessions are conducted over approximately 30 minutes each (Tables 2.4 and 2.5). In addition, the clinicians may structure the group intervention as they feel appropriate. For example, the parents may participate in an activity with the dietitian while the patients participate in an activity with the behavior specialist. Older patients and their families may participate in an exercise activity while younger patients and their families participate in a kitchen activity. Many other combinations may apply. Refer to Chapters 12 by Schumacher et al., 14 by VanVrancken-Tompkins and Sothern et al., 20 by von Almen and Sothern, and Appendix A3 for sample lesson plans. The final lesson follows the same format as lessons 2 through 9, except that a small amount of time either at the beginning or at the end of class is dedicated to preparing the patients for the follow-up evaluations, which should be conducted at the next class meeting. Quarterly Evaluation Follow-Up Interventionists should conduct the quarterly follow-up evaluation in a similar manner as the baseline evaluation. Remember to use the Evaluation Form (Appendix A1.19) to record the measures, which will then be inserted into the Quarterly Evaluation Results Form (Appendix A1.22). Refer to the Protocol descriptions for each of the measures (Appendix 2). Prior to the last session, Awards, Graduation and New Goals, registration should begin for incoming participants. Repeat steps 1 through 5. The parent information session for incoming participants may be scheduled on the same night as the final lesson directly afterward. The orientation session for incoming participants may be scheduled to run simultaneously with the follow-up evaluation in a separate meeting room. Likewise, the baseline evaluation for incoming participants may be conducted in the clinic rooms on the same day continuing participants are presented with awards in a separate meeting room. Thus, continuing and incoming participants may begin lesson 1 during the next weekly meeting (Table 2.5). Awards, Graduation, New Goals During the class that follows the quarterly evaluations, the parents are again given the results of their child’s health and fitness evaluations (Appendix A1.22). These are discussed in the group
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Handbook of Pediatric Obesity: Clinical Management
setting, with particular attention given to the positive changes achieved by the patients over the term of the program. Before this class, the clinicians calculate the new goal weights and current BMI percentile; these are listed on the Quarterly Evaluation Results Form (Appendix A1.22). On the basis of these results, a decision is made whether to “graduate” the patient to the next level. Patients who graduate can be given a certificate. Awards can also be given for perfect attendance (prizes may be T-shirts, inexpensive sports equipment, or similar items). An exercise certificate and award can also be given to the boy and the girl with the highest total number of exercise minutes recorded on the exercise self-monitoring records. Award certificates can also be given for most new vegetables sampled.
EVALUATING A HEALTH PROMOTION PROGRAM EVALUATION APPROACHES There are several ways to approach the evaluation of your pediatric weight management program. Process evaluation will measure variables associated with the delivery of the intervention such as program times, speakers, and participant attendance and approval ratings [27]. Data gathered will enable the interventionist to assess program compliance and participant adherence and satisfaction. Impact evaluation data measure knowledge, awareness, attitudes, and behaviors. Many of the psychological parameters that are outlined in Chapter 9 by Johnson and von Almen fall into this category (see Appendix 2.5). Outcome evaluation is the most commonly used evaluation in the clinical management of pediatric obesity. This type of evaluation measures the variables that answer the primary goal of the program. Variables typically include morbidity or mortality, vital signs and symptoms, and physiologic and metabolic parameters. Because the primary goal of pediatric weight management is the achievement of a healthy body weight, height and weight indices and anthropometry best determine program success (Appendix 2). By using the baseline and quarterly evaluation results, it is possible to perform simple analyses to determine successful outcome.
RESULTS
AND
REPORTING
Data collection, analysis, and reporting are time-consuming, tedious tasks. However, the information gathered from these processes is vital to maintaining a successful program. A sample spreadsheet that can be used to extract data from clinical files is located in Appendix A1.23. This information can easily be transferred to a data management system for further analysis. Many modern computer programs are equipped with systems that can transfer this data into visual presentations for marketing and promotions (Figure 2.2).
SUMMARY The business of pediatric weight management, although complex, is doable. The economic effect of reversing obesity during childhood is unknown. However, current costs to treat pediatric obesity– related illness are over $100 million. The cost to provide treatment of pediatric obesity varies, but the short-term positive results of programs using family-based, multidisciplinary approaches are consistent. The task then is to apply sound design principles, health promotion models and theories, and implementation strategies to specific populations and locations. This process requires careful research into the needs of the target audience, the specific health problems surrounding obesity, and the development of goals and objectives. The program must then be organized and structured. Medical, legal, and financial concerns must be addressed. Once this is accomplished, step-by-step implementation will ensure successful outcome, and ongoing program evaluation will maintain program quality.
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50 Weight in kilograms
43.3 40 30
35.7 28.2 22.6
20 10 0
Baseline Age: 5–11 years (N = 27)
15 weeks Age: 12–17 years (N = 19)
FIGURE 2.2 Weight change after participation in a pediatric weight management program.
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Handbook of Pediatric Obesity: Clinical Management 17. Raynor, H. A., C. K. Kilanowski, I. Esterlis, and L. H. Epstein. A cost-analysis of adopting a healthful diet in a family-based obesity treatment program. J Am Diet Assoc. 102:645–656, 2002. 18. Batch, J. A. and L. A. Baur. Management and prevention of obesity and its complications in children and adolescents. Med J Aust. 182:130–135, 2005. 19. Krebs, N. F. and M. S. Jacobson. American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Nutrition. Prevention of pediatric overweight and obesity. Pediatrics. 112:424–430, 2003. 20. Baranowski, T., K. W. Cullen, T. Nicklas, D. Thompson, and J. Baranowski. Are current health behavioral change models helpful in guiding prevention of weight gain efforts? Obes Res. 11 Suppl:23S–43S, 2003. 21. Davis, K. and K. K. Christoffel. Obesity in preschool and school-age children. Treatment early and often may be best. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 148:1257–1261, 1994. 22. Sothern, M. S. Obesity prevention in children: physical activity and nutrition. Nutrition. 20:704–708, 2004. 23. Ogden, C. L., K. M. Flegal, M. D. Carroll, and C. L. Johnson. Prevalence and trends in overweight among US children and adolescents, 1999–2000. JAMA. 288:1728–1732, 2002. 24. Crawford, P., M., Sothern, D. Hoest. Pediatric overweight: position statement and evidence-based analysis of interventions. J Amer Diet Assoc. in press. 25. Epstein, L. H., L. H. Kuller, R. R. Wing, A. Valoski, and J. McCurley. The effect of weight control on lipid changes in obese children. Am J Dis Child. 143:454–457, 1989. 26. Trick, J. Effective management of a hospital-based health promotion program: keys to success. Am J Health Promot. 4:317–319, 1990. 27. McKenzie, S. J. and J. L. Smeltzer. Planning, Implementing, and Evaluation Health Promotion Programs, 3rd ed. Needham Heights, MA: Allyn & Bacon, 2001. 28. Green, l. W. and Kreuter, M.W. Healtlh Promotion Planning: An Educational and Ecological Approach, 3rd ed. Mountain View, CA: Mayfield, 1999. 29. Simons-Morton, B. G., W. H. Greene, and N. H. Gottlieb. Introduction to Health Education and Health Promotion, 2nd ed. Prospect Heights, IL: Waveland Press, 1995. 30. Simons-Morton, D. G., B. G. Simons-Morton, G. S. Parcel, and J. F. Bunker. Influencing personal and environmental conditions for community health: a multilevel intervention model. Family Commun. Health. 11:25–35, 1988. 31. Walsh, D. C., R. E. Rudd, B. A. Moeykens, and T. W. Moloney. Social marketing for public health. Health Affairs. 12:104–119, 1993. 32. Neiger, B. L. Social marketing: making public health sense. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Utah Public Health Association. Provo, UT, 1998. 33. Evans, W., E. Finkelstein, D. Kamerow, and J. Renaud. Public perceptions of childhood obesity. Am J Prev Med. 28:26–32, 2005. 34. Thompson, D., J. B. Brown, G. A. Nichols, P. J. Elmer, and G. Oster. Body mass index and future healthcare costs: a retrospective cohort study. Obes Res. 9:210–218, 2001. 35. Must, A. Does overweight in childhood have an impact on adult health? Nutr Rev. 61:139–142, 2003. 36. Goetzel, R. Z., D. R. Anderson, R. W. Whitmer, R. J. Ozminkowski, R. L. Dunn, and J. Wasserman. The relationship between modifiable health risks and health care expenditures. An analysis of the multi-employer HERO health risk and cost database. The Health Enhancement Research Organization (HERO) Research Committee. J Occup Environ Med. 40:843–854, 1998. 37. Ganz, M. L. The economic evaluation of obesity interventions: its time has come. Obes Res. 11:1275–1277, 2003. 38. Saelens, B. E., J. F. Sallis, D. E. Wilfley, K. Patrick, J. A. Cella, and R. Buchta. Behavioral weight control for overweight adolescents initiated in primary care. Obes Res. 10:22–32, 2002. 39. Schwimmer, J. B. Managing overweight in older children and adolescents. Pediatr Ann. 33:39–44, 2004. 40. Pickering, T., L. Clemow, K. Davidson, and W. Gerin. Behavioral cardiology — has its time finally arrived? Mt Sinai J Med. 70:101–112, 2003. 41. Hill, J. O. and C. J. Billington. Obesity: its time has come. Am J Hypertens. 15(7 Pt. 1):655–656, 2002. 42. Epstein, L., C. Gordy, H. Raynor, M. Beddome, C. Kilanowski, and R. Paluch. Increasing fruit and vegetable intake and decreasing fat and sugar intake in families at risk for childhood obesity. Obes Res. 9:171–178, 2001.
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43. Edmunds, L., E. Waters, and E. Elliott. Evidence based paediatrics: evidence based management of childhood obesity. BMJ. 323:916–919, 2001. 44. Brown, R., M. Sothern, R. Suskind, J. Udall, and U. Blecker. Racial differences in the lipid profiles of obese children and adolescents before and after significant weight loss. Clin Pediatr (Phila). 39:427–431, 2000. 45. Ebbeling, C. B., M. M. Leidig, K. B. Sinclair, J. P. Hangen, and D. S. Ludwig. A reduced-glycemic load diet in the treatment of adolescent obesity. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 157:773–779, 2003. 46. Epstein, L. H., A. Valoski, R. Koeske, and R. R. Wing. Family-based behavioral weight control in obese young children. J Am Diet Assoc. 86:481–484, 1986. 47. Epstein, L. H., A. Valoski, R. R. Wing, and J. McCurley. Ten-year outcomes of behavioral familybased treatment for childhood obesity. Health Psychol. 13:373–383, 1994. 48. Sothern, M., J. Udall, R. Suskind, A. Vargas, and U. Blecker. Weight loss and growth velocity in obese children after very low calorie diet, exercise and behavior modification. Acta Paediatrica. 89:1036–1043, 2000. 49. Sothern, M. S., M. Loftin, U. Blecker, and J. N. Udall, Jr. Impact of significant weight loss on maximal oxygen uptake in obese children and adolescents. J Investig Med. 48:411–416, 2000. 50. Sothern, M. S., H. Schumacher, T. K. von Almen, L. K. Carlisle, and J. N. Udall. Committed to kids: an integrated, 4-level team approach to weight management in adolescents. J Am Diet Assoc. 102:S81–85, 2002. 51. McInnis, K. J., B. A. Franklin, and J. M. Rippe. Counseling for physical activity in overweight and obese patients. Am Fam Physician. 67:1249–1256, 2003. 52. Falkner, B. and S. Michel. Obesity and other risk factors in children. Ethn Dis. 9:284–289, 1999. 53. Hill, J. and F. Throwbridge. The causes and health consequences of obesity in children and adolescents. Pediatrics. 101:497–575, 1989. 54. Rippe, J. M. and S. Hess. The role of physical activity in the prevention and management of obesity. J Am Diet Assoc. 98:S31–38, 1998. 55. Rosner, B., R. Prineas, J. Loggie, and S. Daniels. Percentiles for body mass index in U.S. children 5 to 17 years of age. J Pediatrics. 132:211–222, 1998. 56. Hedley, A., C. Ogden, C. Johnson, M. Carroll, L. Curtin, and K. Flegal. Prevalence of overweight and obesity among US children, adolescents, and adults, 1992–2002. JAMA. 291:2847–2850, 2004. 57. Hill, J. and F. Throwbridge. The causes and health consequences of obesity in children and adolescents. Pediatrics. 101:497–575, 1998. 58. James, W. P. and A. Ralph. New understanding in obesity research. Proc Nutr Soc. 58:385–393, 1999. 59. Roux, L., C. Ubach, C. Donaldson, and M. Ryan. Valuing the benefits of weight loss programs: an application of the discrete choice experiment. Obes Res. 12:1342–1351, 2004. 60. American College of Sports Medicine Position Stand. The recommended quantity and quality of exercise for developing and maintaining cardiorespiratory and muscular fitness, and flexibility in healthy adults, Med Sci Sports Exerc. 30:975–991, 1998. 61. Ad Hoc Work Group of the American Publish Health Association. Criteria for the development of health promotion and education programs. Am J Public Health. 77:89–92, 1987. 62. Wang, S. S., T. A. Wadden, L. G. Womble, and C. A. Nonas. What consumers want to know about commercial weight-loss programs: a pilot investigation. Obes Res. 11:48–53, 2003. 63. Borg, W. R., and Gall, M.D. Educational Research: An Introduction. 5th ed. New York: Longman, 1989 64. Sothern, M. S. Exercise as a modality in the treatment of childhood obesity. Pediatr Clin North Am. 48:995–1015, 2001. 65. Dorn, L. D., E. J. Susman, and J. C. Fletcher. Informed consent in children and adolescents: age, maturation and psychological state. J Adolesc Health. 16:185–190, 1995. 66. Susman, E. J., L. D. Dorn, and J. C. Fletcher. Participation in biomedical research: the consent process as viewed by children, adolescents, young adults, and physicians. J Pediatr. 121:547–552, 1992. 67. Jelalian, E., J. Boergers, C. S. Alday, and R. Frank. Survey of physician attitudes and practices related to pediatric obesity. Clin Pediatr (Phila). 42:235–245, 2003. 68. Daniels, S. R. Obesity in the pediatric patient: cardiovascular complications. Prog Pediatr Cardiol. 12:161–167, 2001.
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Handbook of Pediatric Obesity: Clinical Management 69. Barlow, S. E. and W. H. Dietz. Management of child and adolescent obesity: summary and recommendations based on reports from pediatricians, pediatric nurse practitioners, and registered dietitians. Pediatrics. 110:236–238, 2002. 70. Sothern, M. S., S. Hunter, R. M. Suskind, R. Brown, J. N. Udall, Jr., and U. Blecker. Motivating the obese child to move: the role of structured exercise in pediatric weight management. South Med J. 92:577–584, 1999.
Section 2 Medical Aspects of Treatment
Complications 3 Medical and Comorbidities of Pediatric Obesity Marc S. Jacobson CONTENTS Genetic Syndromes Associated with Childhood Obesity ...............................................................32 Endocrine Disorders.........................................................................................................................32 Hypothyroidism ......................................................................................................................32 Growth Hormone Deficiency .................................................................................................32 Cardiovascular Complications .........................................................................................................33 Lipid Disorders.......................................................................................................................33 Cardiac Structure and Function .............................................................................................34 Insulin Resistance Syndromes .........................................................................................................35 Metabolic Syndrome or Syndrome X ....................................................................................35 Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome ................................................................................................35 Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus .......................................................................................................36 Gastrointestinal System....................................................................................................................36 Cholelithiasis (Gallstones)......................................................................................................36 Hepatic Steatosis (Fatty Liver)...............................................................................................36 Pulmonary Complications of Obesity .............................................................................................37 General Alterations in Pulmonary Function ..........................................................................37 Asthma....................................................................................................................................37 Obstructive Sleep Apnea Hypoventilation Syndrome ...........................................................37 Neurological .....................................................................................................................................37 Orthopedic ........................................................................................................................................37 References ........................................................................................................................................38 This chapter reviews the risks and consequences associated with childhood and adolescent obesity. It does not exhaustively list every complication and comorbidity but, rather, focuses on conditions likely to be seen in clinical practice either that are important in the differential diagnosis or that have important acute, immediate, or long-term health consequences. Also emphasized are medical complications that are used in clinical decision making regarding intensity of treatment and in choosing weight goals for children and adolescents [1]. As the number of overweight pediatric patients has increased, so has the incidence and degree of medical complications. Medical complications of pediatric obesity can be classified as those affecting the child or adolescent in the present and immediate future, or those that have implications primarily for adult health and life span [2]. This distinction has important implications for the motivation of the patient and family, as well as for the practitioner, the third-party payer, and society. Subclassification is by body system, as this method aids in understanding pathophysiology and management. 31
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GENETIC SYNDROMES ASSOCIATED WITH CHILDHOOD OBESITY These conditions are rare and are usually associated with an abnormality evident on physical exam, developmental delay, or mental retardation. Many, such as the dysmorphic syndromes, Turner’s, and Beckwith–Wiedeman, are generally identified during infancy before the development of obesity. Prader–Willi Syndrome is the best described and most frequent of these syndromes and is associated with hypotonia, poor linear growth, dysmorphic features such as small hands and feet, hypogonadotropic hypogonadism, and developmental delay. It is caused by the loss of paternally expressed genes, including small nuclear ribonucleoprotein, within the critical region of chromosome 15q. The striking hyperphagia associated with high ghrelin levels noted in this syndrome is the syndrome’s most difficult management challenge [3]. The Bardet–Biedl syndrome is characterized by mental retardation, retinitis pigmentosa, hypogonadism, and polydactyly. Several chromosome regions have been identified as involved [3]. Pseudohypoparathyroidism, which is so named because of its phenotypic similarity to the features of hypoparathyroidism without the low parathyroid function, consists of short stature, short neck, rounded facies, hypocalcemia, and mental retardation. These syndromes are important to be aware of in the differential diagnosis of pediatric obesity and are more thoroughly discussed in Chapter 7 of Volume 1.
ENDOCRINE DISORDERS Taken individually, endocrine disorders are rare causes of obesity in pediatric practice, but as a group they make up an important reversible cause of obesity and have significant morbidity and potential mortality. Recognizing the signs and symptoms is thus important. A general rule is that any child who presents as overweight and is below the 50th percentile of height for age should be screened for an underlying endocrinologic etiology. The yield of endocrine screening tests in taller children will be very low, and without other signs and symptoms, testing should not be done. In the shorter group, it will still be less than 0.5 to 1% in our clinical experience, but high enough to warrant a raised index of suspicion.
HYPOTHYROIDISM Congenital hypothyroidism is screened for at birth, but the acquired forms can occur at any age. When it is insidious in onset, it may present as only obesity with hypercholesterolemia. Often the typical growth, metabolic, and intellectual function abnormalities classically described in this condition present subtly, resulting in delayed diagnosis. Screening is therefore warranted, but the specific laboratory investigations for screening should be discussed with a local pediatric endocrinologist because clinical lab specificity and sensitivity may vary considerably from center to center. In our center we screen with a thyroid-stimulating hormone for hypothyroidism among children presenting with short stature or delayed growth, obesity, and hypercholesterolemia [4].
GROWTH HORMONE DEFICIENCY Growth hormone–deficient children, in addition to presenting with reduced growth velocity and short stature, have reduced fat-free mass. The metabolic abnormalities in leptin and ghrelin are corrected by growth hormone treatment, but insulin resistance may ensue. Primary growth hormone deficiency is not likely to present as obesity, but growth velocity measures can easily differentiate the two conditions, as in obesity, growth velocity is normal or high. Hypercortisolism can be either central (adrenocorticotropic hormone [ACTH] excess or Cushing disease), peripheral (ACTH-producing tumor or adrenal adenoma), or iatrogenic in origin. The excess cortisol results in hypertension, glucose intolerance, dyslipidemia, moon facies, decreased muscle mass, broad violaceous stria, visceral adiposity, and poor growth [5]. When history and physical exam warrant screening, an 8 A.M. plasma cortisol test or 24-hour urinary cortisol is indicated.
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CARDIOVASCULAR COMPLICATIONS LIPID DISORDERS The lipid disorders associated with pediatric obesity are among the most frequent, best understood, and most described metabolic abnormalities seen. It has been clear since the beginning of pediatric lipid studies that obesity is associated with lipid abnormalities [6,7]. Recently, with the advent of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reference data for BMI (body mass index) percentiles, it has become clear that BMI greater than the 95th percentile is a major determinant of hyperlipidemia and dyslipidemia in children [8]. Furthermore, the autopsy data from the PDAY study and from Bogalusa have proved that abnormal lipid patterns in youth are associated with premature atherosclerosis, as measured by fibrous plaque accumulation in aorta and coronary arteries [9,10]. In clinical practice, it has become clear that obesity is the most frequent determinant of abnormal lipids, and in the past decade obesity has become a more common cause than either heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia or familial combined hyperlipidemia. Differential diagnosis of lipid disorders in the overweight child includes both primary and secondary causes. They are listed in Table 3.1. Familial hypercholesterolemia is found in 1 in 500 children in the United States and is caused by defects in number or function of the cell surface low-density lipoprotein (LDL) receptors, resulting in impaired LDL clearance and increased intracellular cholesterol synthesis. Associated features of familial hypercholesterolemia include familial history of premature atherosclerosis and findings of peripheral cholesterol deposition, such as tendinous xanthomas, xanthelasma, and corneal arcus in the child or in first-degree relatives. Familial combined hyperlipidemia is found in 1 in 200 to 400 children in the United States. It is caused by hereditary defects in hepatic very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) synthesis and metabolism and is characterized by variable hyperlipidemia patterns in the same family. Children with familial combined hyperlipidemia present with modest elevations of cholesterol and triglycerides, VLDL, and LDL and with depressed levels of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol for age and sex. Mixed environmental–genetic hyperlipidemia is an imprecise but widely used term that attempts to describe the majority of hyperlipidemia seen in children and adults. These children may or may not initially present as overweight, but they will have no clearly defined genetic abnormality of lipid metabolism. They are more susceptible to raised lipids when they eat diets high in saturated fats or simple carbohydrates. Some of the genetic patterns associated with this type of hyperlipidemia, such as variation in the frequency of apo E isoforms, are well described, but most are not. Excessive adiposity itself is a risk factor for hyperlipidemia in children, as shown most clearly in the Bogalusa data [8]. It is clear though that certain individuals are more susceptible to dietaryinduced hyperlipidemia than others and that change in diet and weight loss are sufficient to improve or normalize their lipid patterns.
TABLE 3.1 Differential Diagnosis of Hyperlipidemias in Pediatric Overweight and Obesity Primary Familial hypercholesterolemia (low-density lipoprotein receptor defect) Familial combined hyperlipidemia (very low density lipoprotein overproduction, decreased metabolism) Mixed environmental–genetic hyperlipidemia (apo E) Dyslipidemia
Secondary Hypothyroidism Nephrotic syndrome Hepatitis Diabetes (type I and II) Connective tissue disorders
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Secondary causes of lipid abnormalities in the overweight child can be ruled out with a careful history, a physical examination, and a few simple laboratory tests. Hypothyroidism has been discussed above, under endocrinopathies. Nephrotic syndrome is characterized by edema and proteinuria, as well as hypercholesterolemia. Hepatitis can be a mild, flulike illness in children and may not demonstrate jaundice; therefore, routine hepatic enzyme testing is warranted. Connective tissue diseases have familial combined hyperlipidemia-like patterns that can be exacerbated by corticosteroid therapy [11,12]. The child treated with prolonged systemic corticosteroids who becomes Cushingoid will present with both elevated cholesterol and triglycerides. Hypertension is commonly seen in overweight children. Unlike in adults, where the definition and severity of hypertension is independent of age and height, in children, diagnosis of hypertension is based on percentiles adjusted for age, gender, and height percentile. Therefore, it is important to have available up-to-date reference data tables when assessing blood pressure in children [13]. Proper baseline conditions are critical in obtaining accurate and reliable measurement of blood pressure. The child or adolescent should be seated at rest 10 minutes, and an appropriate size cuff should be applied to the right arm. Cuff size is determined by a bladder width that is approximately 40% of the arm circumference, midway between the olecranon and the acromion processes of the humerus. A larger, rather than a smaller, cuff should be chosen if neither is exactly correct. Systolic pressure is recorded as the first sound, and diastolic as the disappearance point, or fifth sound. The average of two measurements is better than one alone. When an overweight child has been diagnosed with prehypertension or stage 1 hypertension, it is prudent to attempt weight management before pharmacotherapy. If stage 2 hypertension is diagnosed, a pediatric nephrologist should be consulted. There are no data to help us determine how long to prescribe weight management alone before instituting specific antihypertensive therapy; therefore, clinical judgment of whether therapy is working to control weight, as well as twicemonthly measurement of blood pressure, is needed. If stage 1 hypertension persists despite significant weight loss, consultation with a pediatric nephrologist for a renal workup is indicated.
CARDIAC STRUCTURE
AND
FUNCTION
It is apparent that a variety of adaptations or alterations in cardiac structure and function occur as excessive adiposity accumulates, even in the absence of comorbidities. When these changes progress, clinical disease ensues. Findings such as left ventricular dilatation, increased wall stress, compensatory left ventricular hypertrophy, and diastolic dysfunction are common [14]. These changes may also occur on the right, where they are associated with sleep apnea, pulmonary hypertension, and hypoventilation. When obesity is longstanding and severe, progressive congestive heart failure and sudden death may result from these hemodynamic alterations. Most of the available pediatric data are from adolescents. Urbina et al. studied 160 healthy 9- to 22-year-old patients from the Bogalusa population to understand the role of weight gain on cardiac structural development [15]. The researchers found that excess weight gain was associated with increased left ventricular mass and systolic blood pressure [15]. Gidding et al. investigated 48 boys and girls aged 8 to 17 with BMI > 40kg/m2 on a graded cycle exercise test [16]. Only 2 had normal fitness. The remainder had various combinations of deconditioning (37/48), upper airway obstruction (7/48), small airway disease (35/48) and left ventricular hypertrophy (8/48). Friberg et al. found left ventricular mass was 16% greater in obese compared with lean adolescents [17]. Giordano et al. found a significant relation of blood pressure, insulin resistance, and left ventricular mass in 24 obese adolescent males compared with controls [18]. Mensah et al. studied 225 adolescents with a family history of hypertension and found that anthropometric indexes of fat mass were significantly correlated measures with left ventricular markers of dysfunction and adverse prognosis [19]. Daniels et al. studied 201 6- to 17-year-old subjects to further understand the relationship of fat and lean mass to hemodynamic determinants of blood pressure [20]. They concluded that lean mass is a more important correlate of blood
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pressure than fat mass, and that sex and race have significant independent effects on blood pressure in adolescents. Rowland et al. studied adolescent females’ (BMI 30 to 40 kg/m2) response to maximal cycle testing. They found that depressed peak VO2 and limited endurance were not associated with decreased cardiac functional capacity [21]. Whether the cardiac changes seen in obesity are reversible was questioned by Humphries et al. [22]. These researchers studied the effect of 4 months of physical training on body composition and left ventricular mass in obese adolescents and found no effect of training on cardiac mass despite a significant reduction in percentage body fat and visceral fat, as measured by magnetic resonance imaging [22]. On a more hopeful note, Uwaifo et al. from the National Institutes of Health reported a case of a 17-year-old obese boy with familial apical hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. After a 1-year program that resulted in a 49-kg weight loss (BMI reduced from 43.6 to 28.1 kg/m2), the patient showed striking improvement in cardiac functional indices [23].
INSULIN RESISTANCE SYNDROMES The relative ability of a given amount of insulin secretion to dispose of serum glucose varies as much as sixfold among apparently healthy adults. The highest third of individuals are referred to as insulin resistant, and this resistance is associated with a number of disease states, including cardiovascular disease, hypertension, stroke, type 2 diabetes, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, and polycystic ovarian syndrome. One fourth to one third of the variance in insulin resistance is related to being overweight, and particularly to abdominal pattern obesity. Although most of the data about the insulin resistance syndromes have been obtained from adults, it is increasingly clear that insulin resistance is present in obese children and adolescents, and that the consequences are increasingly being seen in the pediatric age group. Reinehr et al. were able to show improvement in insulin resistance in 6to 14-year-old patients over 1 year if treatment resulted in at least a 0.5 decrease in BMI z score [24].
METABOLIC SYNDROME
OR
SYNDROME X
The Adult Treatment Panel III ([25]) has recently defined the metabolic syndrome (or syndrome X, originally described by Reaven, three decades ago) as having three or more of the following five factors: high BMI (males > 29 kg/m2, females > 25 kg/m2), high glucose (>110 mg/dL), high triglycerides (>150 mg/dL), low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (males < 40 mg/dL, females < 50 mg/dL), or hypertension (blood pressure > 130/85 mmHg). The importance of diagnosing this syndrome is that it confers a significant burden of cardiovascular disease risk and, for many individuals, is a precursor to type 2 diabetes mellitus. In a study of 439 obese adolescents, Weiss et al. used three out of the following five items as criteria to diagnose metabolic syndrome: BMI greater than 97th percentile for age and sex, triglycerides greater than 95th percentile, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol below the 5th percentile, systolic or diastolic blood pressure above the 95th percentile, and impaired glucose tolerance. By these criteria, the researchers found metabolic syndrome in 39% of moderately obese adolescents (BMI > 95th percentile) and in 48% of severely obese adolescents (BMI > 2.5 standard deviations above the mean) [26]. The relative risk of metabolic syndrome in that study was increased 1.55 times for each 0.5-unit increase in BMI z score. It is important to realize that although BMI and insulin resistance are related, they are not synonymous. They make independent and different contributions to increasing cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk [27].
POLYCYSTIC OVARIAN SYNDROME Polycystic ovarian syndrome consists of hyperinsulinemic hyperandrogenism with anovulation. It is strongly associated with abdominal adiposity, oligomenorrhea, hirsutism, and infertility. These young women can have psychological effects from the constellation of symptoms and signs that
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often begin during adolescence, when body image concerns are paramount [28]. Risk for diabetes, glucose intolerance, hyperlipidemia, endometrial cancer, infertility, and coronary heart disease are also elevated. One recent study indicates that some young girls at increased risk may be identified and prophylactically treated with insulin-sensitizing agents to prevent polycystic ovarian syndrome. The significant risk factors identified were low birth weight and precocious puberty [29].
TYPE 2 DIABETES MELLITUS Type 2 diabetes mellitus, a disease not previously seen in pediatrics, is now recognized as a major concern. It has become common in pediatric diabetes programs in the last decade [30]. The prevalence of this disease is a result of the epidemic of severe obesity and presents a major ongoing challenge to the health care system. It is of so recent an onset that long-term follow-up studies are not available to determine outcome, but most experts are fearful that complications of this epidemic will be formidable. Although routine screening of all overweight children is not indicated, the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Diabetes Association have guidlines for screening those age 10 years and above who are at high risk by virtue of being overweight and having at least two of the following three findings: family history of diabetes mellitus, signs of insulin resistance, or certain ethnic backgrounds (Native American, African American, Asian-Pacific Islander, Hispanic). The recommended screening test is a fasting glucose or an oral 2-hour glucose tolerance test. Diabetes mellitus is discussed more fully in Chapter 12 of Volume 1.
GASTROINTESTINAL SYSTEM CHOLELITHIASIS (GALLSTONES) Obesity is a major risk factor for the formation of gallstones, cholecystitis, and cholecystectomy. Any obese child with classic symptoms of right upper quadrant abdominal pain with or without fever, nausea, and vomiting should be carefully evaluated and surgical consultation sought. It is seen mostly in females (70%) and after age 10 years. Cholelithiasis can also be seen following rapid weight loss, particularly on very low calorie diets, as a result of lack of motility of the gallbladder. This can be avoided if sufficient fat is included in the dietary regimen [31].
HEPATIC STEATOSIS (FATTY LIVER) Interest in hepatic disorders in obesity has increased as the epidemic of obesity has progressed. As the patients are usually asymptomatic, liver abnormalities are found on routine blood tests of liver enzymes. The concern is that the excess fat storage within the liver will lead to chronic inflammation and eventual cirrhosis, fibrosis, end-stage liver disease, and hepatic failure. The early stage of this problem, known as nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, is associated with the degree of obesity, hypertriglyceridemia, and insulin resistance. It is diagnosed on imaging studies such as ultrasound or computed tomography by evidence of fatty infiltration. Hepatic steatosis is thought to occur initially, through hepatic and peripheral insulin resistance, which leads to altered glucose and free fatty acid metabolism. As much as 77% of pediatric referrals for obesity may have evidence of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease [32]. When the disease progresses, serum chemistries, particularly alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and aspartate aminotransferase (AST), become elevated, showing evidence of inflammation, and the condition becomes known as nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, which has been reported in 5 to 10% of pediatric obesity referrals. The progression, prognosis, and treatment of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis are under active investigation. The work-up for nonalcoholic steatohepatitis should include antibody studies to rule out infectious causes of hepatitis, and enzymes should be monitored during weight management. Drug usage to treat insulin resistance and antioxidant vitamins to reduce inflammation are areas of active investigation.
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PULMONARY COMPLICATIONS OF OBESITY GENERAL ALTERATIONS
IN
PULMONARY FUNCTION
The findings of impaired pulmonary function in overweight children highlight an important concern that decreased lung capacity leads to decreased exercise capacity, followed by decrease in physical activities, leading to a vicious cycle of impaired lifestyle and overweight. Li et al. found reduction in functional residual capacity and diffusion impairment were the most common abnormalities in a cohort of obese patients. Reduction in static lung volume was correlated with the degree of obesity [33]. Lazarus et al., in a randomized population sample of 2500 Australian adolescents, found decreased pulmonary function with increasing adiposity [34]. Because the fall in pulmonary function was severe in obese boys and these falls were correlated with body mass index and skinfolds, it is concluded that diagnosis and management may improve aerobic exercise performance and participation in obese children.
ASTHMA Pianosi and Davis studied the pulmonary functions of children with asthma and found that overweight and obese children were more likely to be overmedicated despite similar asthma severity because of their perceived exercise intolerance [35]. The authors concluded that efforts should be directed at understanding the reasons responsible for reduced exercise tolerance before escalating pharmacologic treatment for asthma among the overweight [35]. Tantisira et al. studied pulmonary function in a group of children with asthma and found that the ratio of forced expiratory volume in 1 second to the forced vital capacity was inversely associated with BMI, but that other measures of asthma severity were not independently associated with severity of overweight [36].
OBSTRUCTIVE SLEEP APNEA HYPOVENTILATION SYNDROME Obstructive sleep apnea hypoventilation syndrome is associated with obesity in adults. It is characterized by snoring, irregular breathing with long pauses during sleep, and daytime tiredness. In children, it can be confused with attention deficit disorder and other learning problems, as well as depression. Rosen studied a group of 326 children who were referred for sleep studies and found that although obesity was not the only cause of pediatric obstructive sleep apnea hypoventilation syndrome, high BMI was twice as prevalent as expected (28%) in this population [37].
NEUROLOGICAL Pseudotumor cerebri (benign intracranial hypertension) presents with headache, dizziness, diploplia, and mild unsteadiness. It generally has a gradual onset and does not show localizing neurological signs. If symptoms begin acutely, or if focal signs are present, other sources of raised intracranial pressure must be sought. Phillips et al. studied the 10-year incidence of this disorder in a hospitalbased series of children up to 18 years of age [38]. Obesity was associated with one-third of cases. There was no gender predilection. One third of patients demonstrated some optic atrophy at follow up [38]. Weight loss is recognized as the best treatment.
ORTHOPEDIC Two orthopedic conditions are of particular importance in pediatric obesity — Blount disease and slipped capital femoral epiphysis. Both occur primarily in younger adolescents and preteens, and both are disorders of the lower extremity. Both conditions may lead to a vicious cycle of overweight making the orthopedic condition worse, while the raised barrier to physical activity that the
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conditions present then make the overweight condition worse, and so on. Both should be considered orthopedic emergencies requiring surgical consultation because they can be crippling. Blount disease (also known as Tibia vera, or Genu varum) presents as a bowing of the leg with or without pain and limp. It consists of an abnormality in the growth of the medial portion of the proximal tibia. It is unclear whether this abnormality is caused by excess weight placed on the joint at a critical stage in development or whether it is an underlying condition that is aggravated by the excess weight. Plain anterior–posterior x-rays of the leg characteristically show irregularity of the growth of the proximal medial tibial physis, with beaking or a triangulation of the metaphysis. Surgical correction is by osteotomy. Slipped capital femoral epiphysis occurs when the epiphysis of the proximal femur slips off the metaphysis posteriorly and medially secondary to increased weight on the cartilaginous growth plate of the hip [39]. The classic patient is an overweight, hypogonadal boy with delayed bone age. Symptoms include limp, hip or knee pain, and the typical antalgic gate, with the leg externally rotated and abducted.
REFERENCES 1. Barlow E, Dietz WH. Obesity evaluation and treatment: Expert Committee recommendations. The Maternal and Child Health Bureau, Health Resources and Services Administration and the Department of Health and Human Services. Pediatrics 1998; 102(3): 1–11. 2. Must A, Strauss RS. Risks and consequences of childhood and adolescent obesity. International J Obes Rel Metab Disord 1999; 23(Suppl 2): S2–S11. 3. Cummings DE, Clement K, Purnell JQ, Vaisse C, Foster KE, Frayo RS et al. Elevated plasma ghrelin levels in Prader Willi syndrome. Nat Med 2002; 8:643–644. 4. Copperman N, Haas T, Arden MA, Jacobson MS. Multidisciplinary intervention in adolescents with cardiovascular risk factors. In: Jacobson MS, ed. Adolescent Nutritional Disorders: Prevention and Treatment. New York: Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 1997; 817:199–207. 5. Kokkoris P, Pi-Sunyer FX. Obesity and endocrine disease. Endocrin Metab Clin N Am 2003; 895–914. 6. Freedman DS, Srinvasan SR, Burke GL. Relation of body fat distribution to hyperinsulinemia in children and adolescents: the Bogalusa Heart Study. Am J Clin Nutr 1987; 46:403–410. 7. Lauer RM, Conner WE, Leaverton PE. Coronary heart disease risk factors in school children: The Muscatine study. J Ped 1975; 86:967–706. 8. Freedman DS, Dietz WH, Srinivasan SR, Berenson GS. The relation of overweight to cardiovascular risk factors among children and adolescents: the Bogalusa Heart Study. Pediatrics 1999 103(6 Pt 1):1175–1182. 9. McGill HC Jr, McMahan CA, Zieske AW, Sloop GD, Walcott JV, Troxclair DA et al. Associations of coronary heart disease risk factors with the intermediate lesion of atherosclerosis in youth. The Pathobiological Determinants of Atherosclerosis in Youth (PDAY) Research Group. Arterioscler, Thrombo, Vas Biol 2000; (8):1998–2004. 10. Berenson GS, Srinivasan SR, Bao W, Newman WP, 3rd, Tracy RE, Wattigney WA. Association between multiple cardiovascular risk factors and atherosclerosis in children and young adults. The Bogalusa Heart Study. NE J Med1998; 338(23):1650–1656. 13. Blood Pressure Tables for Children and Adolescents. Available at: http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/guidelines/ hypertension/child_tbl.htm. 14. Alpert MA. Obesity cardiomyopathy: pathophysiology and evolution of the clinical syndrome. Am J Med Sci 2001; 321(4):225–236. 15. Urbina EM, Gidding SS, Bao W, Pickoff AS, Berdusis K, Berenson GS. Effect of body size, ponderosity, and blood pressure on left ventricular growth in children and young adults in the Bogalusa Heart Study. Circulation 1995; 91(9):2400–2406. 16. Gidding SS, Nehgme R, Heise C, Muscar C, Linton A, Hassink S. Severe obesity associated with cardiovascular deconditioning, high prevalence of cardiovascular risk factors, diabetes mellitus/ hyperinsulinemia, and respiratory compromise. J Ped 2004;144(6):766–769.
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17. Friberg P, Allansdotter-Johnsson A, Ambring A, Ahl R, Arheden H, Framme J et al. Increased left ventricular mass in obese adolescents. Euro Heart J 2004; 25(11):987–992. 18. Giordano U, Ciampalini P, Turchetta A, Santilli A, Calzolari F, Crino A et al. Cardiovascular hemodynamics: relationships with insulin resistance in obese children. Ped Cardio 2003; 24(6):548–552. 19. Mensah GA, Treiber FA, Kapuku GK, Davis H, Barnes VA, Strong WB. Patterns of body fat deposition in youth and their relation to left ventricular markers of adverse cardiovascular prognosis. Am J Cardo 1999; 84(5):583–588. 20. Daniels SR, Kimball TR, Khoury P, Witt S, Morrison JA. Correlates of the hemodynamic determinants of blood pressure. Hypertension 1996; 28(1):37–41. 21. Rowland T, Bhargava R, Parslow D, Heptulla RA. Cardiac response to progressive cycle exercise in moderately obese adolescent females. J Adolesc Health 2003; 32(6):422–427. 22. Humphries MC, Gutin B, Barbeau P, Vemulapalli S, Allison J, Owens S. Relations of adiposity and effects of training on the left ventricle in obese youths. Med Sci sports Exer 2002; 34(9):1428–1435. 23. Uwaifo GI, Fallon EM, Calis KA, Drinkard B, McDuffie JR, Yanovski JA. Improvement in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy after significant weight loss: case report. So Med J 2003; 96(6):626–631. 24. Reinehr T, Kiess W, Kapellen T, Andler W. Insulin sensitivity among obese children and adolescents, according to degree of weight loss. Pediatrics 2004; 114(6):1569–1573. 25. Third report of the National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) Expert Panel on Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Cholesterol in Adults (Adult Treatment Panel III) final report. Circulation 2002 106:3143–3421. 26. Weiss R, Dziura J, Burgert TS, Tamborlane WV, Taksali SE, Yeckel CW et al. Obesity and the metabolic syndrome in children and adolescents. NE J med 2004; 350(23):2362–2374. 27. Reaven G, Abbasi F, McLaughlin T. Obesity, insulin resistance, and cardiovascular disease. Recent Prog Horm Res 2004; 59:207–223. 28. Buccola JM, Reynolds EE. Polycystic ovary syndrome: a review for primary providers. Prim Care 2003; 30(4):697–710. 29. Ibanez L, Ferrer A, Ong K, Amin R, Dunger D, de Zegher F. Insulin sensitization early after menarche prevents progression from precocious pubarche to polycystic ovary syndrome. J Ped 2004;144(1):23–29. 30. Pinhas-Hamiel O, Dolan LM, Daniels SR et al. Increased incidence of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus among adolescents. J Ped 1996; 128:608–615. 31. Festi D, Colecchia A, Orsini M, Sangermano A, Sottili S, Simoni P et al. Gallbladder motility and gallstone formation in obese patients following very low calorie diets. Use it (fat) to lose it (well). International Journal of Obesity and Related Metabolic Disorders 1998;Jun;22(6):592–600. 32. Chan DF, Li AM, Chu WC, Chan MH, Wong EM, Liu EK et al. Hepatic steatosis in obese Chinese children. Int J Obes Rel Metabol Disord 2004; 28(10):1257–1263. 33. Li AM, Chan D, Wong E, Yin J, Nelson EA, Fok TF. The effects of obesity on pulmonary function. Arch Dis Child 2003; 88(4):361–363. 34. Lazarus R, Colditz G, Berkey CS, Speizer FE. Effects of body fat on ventilatory function in children and adolescents: cross-sectional findings from a random population sample of school children. Ped Pulmonol 1997; 24(3):187–194. 35. Pianosi PT, Davis HT. Determinants of physical fitness in children with asthma. Pediatrics 2004; 113:e225–e229. 36. Tantisira KG, Litonjua AA, Weiss ST, Fuhlbrigge AL, Childhood Asthma Management Program Research Group. Association of body mass with pulmonary function in the Childhood Asthma Management Program (CAMP). Thorax 2003; 58(12):1036–1041. 37. Rosen CL. Clinical features of obstructive sleep apnea hypoventilation syndrome in otherwise healthy children. Ped Pulmonol 1999; 27(6):403–409. 38. Phillips PH, Repka MX, Lambert SR. Pseudotumor cerebri in children. J AAPOS 1998; 2(1):33–38. 39. Loder RT, Aronson DD, Greenfield ML. The epidemiology of bilateral slipped capital femoral epiphysis. A study of children in Michigan. J Bone Joint Surg 1993;75:1141–1147.
Aspects of Treatment: 4 Medical The Role of the Physician Stewart T. Gordon CONTENTS Introduction ......................................................................................................................................41 Role of the Primary Care Practitioners ...........................................................................................42 The Role of the Physician in the Treatment of Overweight Youth ................................................43 Performing the Initial Medical Evaluation ............................................................................44 Ordering and Interpreting Laboratory Blood Work...............................................................44 Prescribing an Appropriate Diet in Coordination with the Program Dietician ....................44 Provide Ongoing Medical Supervision ..................................................................................44 Follow-Up ...............................................................................................................................44 Height and Weight Measurement...............................................................................45 BMI and CDC Percentiles .........................................................................................46 Circumference Measurements ....................................................................................46 Blood Pressure and Heart Rate ..................................................................................46 Laboratory Blood Work (Baseline, 3 Months and 1 Year)........................................46 Body Composition Analysis (Estimate of Percentage Body Fat) .............................47 Measurement of Physical Activity Level and Fitness ...............................................47 Psychological Testing .................................................................................................48 Tanner Staging............................................................................................................48 Conclusion........................................................................................................................................49 References ........................................................................................................................................49
INTRODUCTION What has led to the current epidemic of childhood obesity? When most of today’s parents were growing up, we had more opportunities for free play. Our neighborhoods tended to be safer, and usually someone was at home, supervising our activities. These activities typically did not include the increasing sedentary activities we have today (multiple television stations, computers, Internet, and video games). We spent more of our time engaging in activities that burned more calories — bike riding, playing chase, climbing trees. Most families ate a home-cooked meal every night. The rate of childhood obesity was 5 to 10%. Now, about 15% of children are considered overweight or at risk for overweight. Environmental factors may contribute as much as 80% to the causes of childhood obesity. These factors include increased caloric and fat intake (e.g., energy-dense foods and beverages, irregular meal patterns, snacking and dining out, and sedentary behaviors, such as television viewing [1,2]) and absence of regular physical activity [3]. Research indicates that obese children demonstrate decreased levels of physical activity and increased psychosocial problems. It is well accepted that the environment of the family plays a key role in the development of obesity in young children at risk for adult obesity and related diseases such as diabetes [4–7]. Research shows that parent inactivity strongly predicts child inactivity [6]. Moreover, the exercise 41
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patterns of parents have a strong influence on the frequency of exercise in their children [8]. Research also shows that parental influences are early determinants of food attitudes and practices in young children [9]. Furthermore, food preferences greatly influence the consumption patterns of young children [10]. Therefore, strategies that positively alter the behaviors and environment of the family may reduce the risk of adult obesity and diabetes by improving physical activity and nutrition. This may prevent the onset of pediatric obesity and the risk of metabolic disease later in life, especially in those children with primary risk factors (at risk). Efforts to halt and reverse obesity and related metabolic disease, therefore, should begin with young children. More important, educational interventions that target the parents of children at risk for obesity should be an integral part of standard pediatric and family medical care. The health consequences of children’s being obese are significant. Obese children are more likely to develop cardiovascular disease (high cholesterol, hypertension), glucose intolerance (which may lead to diabetes), gallstones, and psychological problems, to name a few. The most serious and prevalent long-term consequence of childhood obesity is psychosocial. Obese children are targets of early and systematic discrimination by peers, family members, and others. Obese children frequently have low self-esteem and social isolation and can become depressed. One of the best reasons to treat childhood obesity is to reduce the psychosocial consequences.
ROLE OF THE PRIMARY CARE PRACTITIONERS The most successful approach to treating childhood obesity is through a multidisciplinary (medical, nutritional, psychological, physical activity), family-based approach [11]. Such approaches teach both the overweight child and his or her family how to lead a healthier lifestyle to promote the achievement of a healthier weight. Interventions are best delivered in a group family setting. However, the combination of medical supervision, dietary guidance, promoting increased physical activity, and behavioral counseling should be promoted in the individual medical care of overweight youth, as well. Unfortunately, although the number of obese pediatric patients seen by physicians each year is continuously increasing, knowledge of effective treatment techniques is lagging. Recently, Story and others identified a lack of parent involvement and motivation and lack of support services as the most frequent barriers to treatment of pediatric obesity in clinical settings [12]. Even though obesity is recognized by the majority of health care professionals as a serious, chronic disease, they feel unprepared to address the multidimensional aspects of the obesity problem. Studies indicate that health care professionals believe that childhood obesity requires immediate medical attention and treatment [12]. However, many of their treatment practices are not in accordance with current expert recommendations [13]. This was evidenced when a survey of providers identified perceived low proficiency in the use of behavioral management strategies, guidance in parenting techniques, and addressing family conflicts [12]. Moreover, providers feel they lack expertise in motivational skills to promote change in dietary and physical activity patterns [14]. Despite these findings, behavioral therapy has been shown to be effective, even when done briefly. The Worcester Area Trial for Counseling in Hyperlipidemia study is an example of how brief counseling in adults can provide positive results in weight loss [15]. During the study, physicians were given 8 minutes with each patient. Study patients either received counseling alone (control) or counseling combined with handouts and questionnaires concerning dieting (treatment) while in the waiting rooms. A year later, treatment patients were found to have lost 2.3 kg more than the control and, as a benefit of that loss, lowered their cholesterol by 3.8 mg. Still, physicians rarely feel that a great difference can be made in the behavior of the families through the use of individual counseling [15]. This is caused by a lack of both training and experience of physicians in the area of counseling interventions. Another factor affecting this lack of enthusiasm in physicians is that many feel “ill-equipped” to handle behavioral issues [15,16], and that such issues are out of their area of interest [15]. Moreover, because of time constraints, physicians in primary care especially are conflicted, with heavy workloads combining with a strong work ethic to give the
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best care to their patients. Finally, a lack of incentives offered to physicians is another factor that reduces physician counseling in weight management [15]. However, physicians play a vital role to the safety and effectiveness of weight loss and maintenance interventions in children.
THE ROLE OF THE PHYSICIAN IN THE TREATMENT OF OVERWEIGHT YOUTH Initially, physicians are the best source for the diagnosis of pediatric obesity, according to the U.S. Surgeon General. Doctors and other health care professionals are the best source in determining whether a child or adolescent’s weight is healthy, and they can help rule out rare medical problems as the cause of unhealthy weight. A body mass index (BMI) can be calculated from measurements of height and weight. Health professionals often use a BMI “growth chart” to help them assess whether a child or adolescent is overweight. A physician will also consider a child or adolescent’s age and growth patterns to determine whether his or her weight is healthy. Only providers trained in pediatric medicine possess the level of expertise required to provide an accurate assessment of pediatric obesity. Regardless, studies indicate that pediatric health care providers diagnosed overweight in only one half (53%) of overweight children [17]. We found similar poor rates of diagnosis and referral in a study of Louisiana youth seen in three separate physician’s offices [18]. Physicians diagnosed obesity in very few of their patients who were classified as greater than 95th percentile BMI (Table 4.1). Physicians also provide guidance to parents so that they may best understand the definition of overweight or at risk for overweight in children. The physicians can then, with the parents’ input, decide on the best plan of action for the overweight child. Recent studies indicate that at this point, about 75% of physicians will refer patients initially to registered dieticians [14], and only about 20% of patients will be referred to weight management programs. In another study, in those children diagnosed as overweight by their physicians, comprehensive treatment programs were not generally prescribed [17]. In our study, we observed similar low referral rates [18] (Table 4.1). Of more concern is that between 27% and 42% of pediatricians or pediatric health providers report that weight management programs are not available in their area [14]. Several clinical observations [19–26] have detailed an interdisciplinary pediatric weight management intervention in which the physician or pediatric health care provider has an integral role in treatment. He or she is responsible for the overall medical supervision of the program and oversees the diagnosis, evaluation, and dietary and physical activity plan of action. In this chapter, step-by-step details are provided of the medical oversight provided in this approach. Further details may be found in Chapter 2 by Sothern, Chapter 12 by Schumacher et al., Chapter 14 by Sothern, Chapter 19 by Carlisle and Gordon, and Chapter 20 by von Almen and Sothern, and in Appendices A1, A2, and A3.
TABLE 4.1 Patients Diagnosed and Referred for Treatment
Total number of patients Total number obese Percentage obese Total number diagnosed with obesity Percentage diagnosed Total number referred for obesity treatment Percentage referred for treatment
Clinic 1
Clinic 2
Clinic 3
552 69 12.5 19 27.54 6 8.70
205 30 14.83 12 40.00 2 0.667
294 30 10.20 0 0 0 0.00
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TABLE 4.2 Diagnosing Overweight and Risk for Overweight (Initial Medical Evaluation) Family/medical history and physical exam Anthropometric measures Weight and height Calculate body mass index (BMI) Laboratory evaluation (>95th percentile BMI) Chem 20; CBC w/diff; lipid profile; thyroid profile Maturation level (Tanner stage)
PERFORMING
THE INITIAL
MEDICAL EVALUATION (TABLE 4.2)
An initial medical history and a physical examination are performed before enrollment into the treatment program. This medical information is reviewed with the parents and child before entry into the program. Assessment and discussion of the child’s growth chart and current weight status occurs at this time. To determine the child’s goal weight, the physician observes on the BMI growth chart what weight would match the child’s height percentile (Appendix A1.10). This is the child’s ideal body weight. The child’s goal weight is this weight plus an additional 20%.
ORDERING
AND INTERPRETING
LABORATORY BLOOD WORK (TABLE 4.2)
The pediatrician orders an initial battery of blood work that includes a complete blood count, metabolic panel, and lipid profile (Appendix A2.2). These laboratory tests are repeated 3 months into the program and at the end of the program. Other tests may be ordered after the initial medical evaluation as needed.
PRESCRIBING AN APPROPRIATE DIET IN COORDINATION WITH THE PROGRAM DIETICIAN The diet will be for either weight loss or weight maintenance. The child’s medical history, family health history, age, gender, and current weight status will be considered before prescribing an appropriate diet. In children at risk for overweight, moderate approaches are best. However, in children with clinically significant overweight conditions (BMI > 99th percentile), more aggressive approaches may be necessary. Although the research is limited with respect to such approaches, several clinical observations and a few randomized controlled trials indicate that the use of very low calorie diets, low-carbohydrate diets, and low-glycemic diets may result in short-term weight loss in very overweight youth. In Chapter 11, Sothern and others survey the literature and provide specific guidelines for low glycemic diets. Sample diets are located in Appendix 3.
PROVIDE ONGOING MEDICAL SUPERVISION (TABLE 4.3) In group interventions, the pediatrician may choose to attend most of the intervention sessions, especially during the first 3 months of the program. He may elect to weigh the children and check vital signs while discussing their progress and answering questions. This helps to ensure medical safety throughout the course of the program. Whether the physician attends the sessions routinely or not, he or she should be available by phone to address questions or problems that arise between weekly sessions. In overweight and normal-weight children with parental obesity frequent monitoring, reduced television viewing, and increased opportunities for unstructured active play are typically recommended by the physician (Table 4.4).
FOLLOW-UP (TABLE 4.5) At the beginning of treatment for pediatric obesity, and every 3 months afterward, patients undergo a comprehensive evaluation. The results of the evaluations are distributed to the children and parents
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TABLE 4.3 Medical Supervision Quarterly anthropometric measurements Document and follow height growth Biolectrical impedance, body mass index, circumferences, skinfolds Physician is available by phone/beeper during the week Active weekly participation by the physician Get to know the children personally Present for questions from kids and family Participate in activities with kids
TABLE 4.4 Normal and Overweight Children 6 Years or Younger, with Parental Obesity Regular visits with the pediatrician to monitor growth and development Parent training and fitness education Limit access to television/video/computer Increased opportunities for unstructured physical activity — free play Create an environment inside the home that promotes active play Create an environment outside the home that promotes active play
TABLE 4.5 Childhood Obesity Treatment Quarterly Evaluation Body composition Dual energy x-ray absorptiometry Skinfolds Bioelectrical impedance Dietary history Physical activity rating Psychological measures Self-esteem Depression Self-efficacy
and are discussed with the family as necessary. In some cases, the physician may choose to refer the family to a staff psychologist, if available, or other appropriate mental health professional. A registered dietician or exercise professional should also be available to assist with interpretation and to answer questions as well. These evaluations consist of the following 10 items. Appendix 2 contains detailed measurement protocols. Height and Weight Measurement The measurement of height or stature is a major indicator of bone length and general body size. The recommended technique for height measurement includes the use of a vertical board with an attached metric rule and horizontal headboard, collectively known as a stadiometer. The standard measure of weight should be recorded using a calibrated electronic scale. The kilograms should
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be recorded in the patient’s chart. For both height and weight measures, the patient should remove shoes and heavy clothing/objects before the measurement. BMI and CDC Percentiles The BMI, the calculated number that adjusts weight for height, uses the following formula: BMI = weight (kilograms)/height (meters2). The Centers for Disease Control define at risk of overweight as a BMI between the 85th and 95th percentile for age. Children are considered overweight or obese if the BMI is greater than the 95th percentile for age. In adults, a BMI value greater than or equal to 25 but less than 30 is considered overweight, and a BMI value greater than or equal to 30 defines obesity or severe overweight [27]. However, these BMI cutoffs are not appropriate for classifying children’s weight status. First, childhood mortality is not likely to be related to body composition, so it is not possible to develop risk-based criteria [28]. Second, BMI typically varies with age, decreasing in the preschool years, and then increasing after about 6 years of age. Because of these changes in BMI with growth, agespecific criteria are needed. Gender-specific criteria are also needed as a result of differences in body composition and timing of growth patterns in adolescence for boys and girls [29]. Revised growth charts with smoothed age and sex-specific BMI percentile curves were developed by the National Center for Health Statistics for children aged 2 to 17 years [28]. According to current standards, youths with a BMI greater than or equal to the 95th percentile for age and sex are considered overweight, and those with a BMI falling between the 85th and 95th percentiles for age and sex are considered at risk for overweight [30–32]. It is recommended that children with a BMI at the 85th or higher percentile be further evaluated for complications associated with overweight and for recent excessive weight gain. Assessments should include the evaluation of potential genetic, endocrine, or psychological syndromes [30,33–36]. Family medical, diet, and physical activity history should be considered to identify primary risk factors for overweight, such as parental obesity, sedentary behaviors, early feeding practices, metabolic or hormonal stress, socioeconomic factors, and ethnicity [5–7,9,34,37–41]. Circumference Measurements An additional method of assessing body composition is the measurement of girth of various body sections [42]. From the sum of the measurements, percentage body fat is determined from equations, tables, or nomograms. A metal or fiberglass measuring tape with a metric scale is used to measure the circumference of the waist and hip. The waist circumference is a useful indicator for determining reduction in fat weight after treatment. Blood Pressure and Heart Rate Resting blood pressure (BP) measurement is taken as a measure of the force of the heart’s pumping action. Hypertension in children and adolescents continues to be defined as systolic BP or diastolic BP that is, on repeated measurement, above the 95th percentile. BP between the 90th and 95th percentile in childhood had been designated “high normal.” To be consistent with the Seventh Report of the Joint National Committee on the Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure [43], this level of BP will now be termed “prehypertensive” and is an indication for lifestyle modifications [43]. Pediatric hypertension is often observed in overweight children, especially those with severe conditions. Laboratory Blood Work (Baseline, 3 Months and 1 Year) Biochemical markers, total cholesterol, triglycerides, high-density lipoproteins, and low-density lipoproteins should be examined by drawing 10 to 20 cc of whole blood in a certified laboratory. Children should be required to fast for 12 hours before the test.
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Body Composition Analysis (Estimate of Percentage Body Fat [Table 4.5]) Skinfold analysis measures the thickness of a double fold of skin and subcutaneous adipose tissue at various body locations [44]. The use of skinfold calipers is the most widely used method for determining obesity. The advantages of this method are its relative simplicity, quickness, and nonevasive nature. In addition, very little space is needed. Various equations have been developed in the prediction of body composition [45–52]. In overweight children, a two-site formula using triceps and subscapular developed by Slaughter et al. [53] has been used and shown to be highly correlated with both underwater weighing and dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) measurements [54]. Bioelectrical impedance may be used to measure the density of lean and adipose tissue in relation to hydration [49,51,52,55]. Studies have shown total body water (TBW) and electrical impedance to be related [56,57]. Further studies also report the utility and reliability of body impedance measurements in the assessment of total body fat [55,58]. Both bioelectrical impedance and skinfolds provide a reasonably accurate, time- and cost-effective method of assessing body fat in overweight children [49–51]. However, care should be taken to select a formula specific to the age, race, and gender of the child, as accuracy varies by study [54,59,60]. More accurate methods are available but are typically reserved for severe overweight conditions or research studies. These include underwater weight and DEXA. For many years, underwater, or hydrostatic, weighing has been the “gold standard” for the measurement of body fat [44]. The use of underwater weighing is based on Archimedes’ principle. Simply stated, Archimedes reasoned that an object submerged in water is buoyed up by a counterforce equaling the weight of the displaced water. An object “loses weight in water.” Therefore, if an object weighs 50 kg in air and 3 kg when submerged, the loss of weight in water, 47 kg, equals the weight of displaced water. We can then calculate the volume of water displaced because the density of water at any temperature is known. More recently, DEXA has been used to determine percentage of fat, lean body mass, and bone mineral density in overweight children [49,51,52,61]. DEXA uses an x-ray source to generate photons to scan subjects [62]. Bone-mineral content measurements previously calibrated against secondary standards with ashed bone sections are used to help calculate fatfree mass [63,64]. Percentage of fat and fat-free body can be predicted with accuracy by observing the ratio of absorbance of the different-energy-level photons, which are linearly related to the percentage of fat in the soft tissues of the body [64]. The coefficient of variation of fat-free tissue measurement has been calculated at 2%, which is comparable to that obtained by hydrodensitometry [65]. Measurement of Physical Activity Level and Fitness (Tables 4.6 and 4.7) The measurement of the patient’s physical activity level provides important clues regarding behaviors that may contribute to the overweight condition. Sedentary behaviors are highly associated with childhood obesity. There are very accurate laboratory procedures that can be used to determine
TABLE 4.6 Physical Activity Rating Accelerometry Intensity-weighted minutes of physical activity Records acceleration/deceleration of movement Objective measure that provides activity counts and intensity Heart rate monitoring Uses heart rate values to determine amount and intensity of physical activity Self-report questionnaires Godin Leisure Time, 7-day recall, self-administrated physical activity checklist (SAPAC) Direct observation System for observing fitness instruction time (SOFIT)
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TABLE 4.7 Metabolic Testing Maximal oxygen uptake (VO2 max) Graded treadmill test Indirect calorimetry Heart rate and blood pressure Resting metabolic rate (RMR) or resting energy expenditure (REE) Indirect calorimetry hood system Respiratory quotient (RQ) or resting energy rate (RER) Ratio of oxygen to carbon dioxide Indicates fuel source (oxidation) Total energy expenditure Stable isotopes (doubly labeled water)
physical activity level. These include accelerometry, total energy expenditure by doubly labeled water, VO2 portable equipment, heart rate monitoring by telemetry, time lapse or video photography, and others [66]. However, the use of such methods is not feasible or cost-effective in primary care settings. Likewise, direct observation techniques such as SOFIT and SOPLAY are impractical in clinical settings. Several self-report questionnaires have been validated in youth 10 years of age or older and are shown to be good predictors of physical activity level (Table 4.6). Samples of these questionnaires may be found in Appendix A2.4.1. Maximal oxygen uptake (VO2 max) is an indicator of physical fitness level in both adult and youth populations [67–71]. The maximal oxygen uptake indicates the functional capacity of the heart, lungs, and skeletal muscle and is generally assumed to be the single best indicator of physical fitness [69]. The VO2 max is determined by exercising a subject and determining O2 intake and O2 and CO2 concentrations in expired air. All VO2 max tests should be supervised by trained and certified exercise physiologists. Assessing cardiopulmonary fitness in the pediatric population has become the focus of recent research in pediatric medicine and exercise science [72–76], Cardiovascular responses to exercise stress can be evaluated by obtaining a value for submaximal steadystate or peak or max exercise value (Peak or Max VO2). Maximal oxygen consumption (VO2 max) has been used as an indicator of health related physical fitness [77]. The criteria for achieving a Peak VO2 response in the pediatric population may not be similar to that of adults [78]. Obtaining a plateau in oxygen consumption in children can oftentimes be difficult. However, there have been several protocols that have been used and validated for pediatric exercise testing. In Chapter 10, Rowland and Loftin detail appropriate fitness testing for overweight youth. Detailed exercise testing protocols are also located in Appendix A2.4.2. Psychological Testing Because overweight children are at increased risk for depression, low self-esteem, and other related psychological disorders, it is important that they be screened by an appropriate mental health professional before treatment. Chapter 9 details the appropriate testing procedures for overweight children. Sample referral forms and detailed psychological testing protocols are located in Appendix A1 and A2.5. Tanner Staging Growth and development are affected by many complex factors. Various outcome measures could reflect innate physiological factors rather than our proposed intervention outcome. To assess the effects of nonmodifiable factors such as age and gender on measurement of growth (weight, height), and body composition (lean body mass, percentage of fat), the sexual maturity rating may be
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determined using methods from Falkner and Tanner [79] on all subjects at fixed intervals (baseline, 10 weeks, 6 months, and 12 months). Sexual maturity ratings (Tanner staging) should be performed during the physical examination by a physician who is specially trained in adolescent medicine (see Appendix A2.6). Alternatively, a self-report tool is available that allows the patient to selfexamine his or her level of maturation [80].
CONCLUSION The current environmental experience of young children includes few opportunities for physical activity [81] and an overabundance of high-calorie foods. Sedentary lifestyles and poor nutrition challenge children who are genetically predisposed to diabetes, heart disease, and other chronic diseases. Obesity is a logical response to this challenge. Therefore, in predisposed children (e.g., those with obese parents and diabetes history), sedentary, nonnutritious environments challenge their physiologic and metabolic capacity and promote overweight conditions, reduced fitness, further inactivity, and increased sedentary behaviors (television watching and snacking). This results in a clinically significant overweight condition (>95th BMI), reduced insulin sensitivity, and an increased risk of type 2 diabetes and heart disease later in adulthood. Research indicates that increasing physical activity and improving nutrition may significantly affect this series of events [82–84]. The current childhood overweight epidemic is neither the fault nor the responsibility of any one single sector of society. All must work together to develop strategies to change public opinion and behavior concerning healthy nutrition and physical activity across the life span. Because children who are at risk for overweight at 7 years of age or older become increasingly more susceptible as they mature, appropriate, targeted family-based dietary and physical activity interventions should be made available in clinical settings. The economic burden of obesity-associated illness during childhood in the United States has increased by 43% in the last two decades [85]. Cost-effective individual and group approaches are available and should be both encouraged and financially supported by the medical community. More funds are needed for programs that work simultaneously to conduct research and provide ongoing interventions to prevent and treat overweight children in clinical settings. Physicians play a key role in these efforts to prevent and treat overweight conditions, as the epidemic of childhood obesity is the most critical challenge facing the medical community today.
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34. Arslanian, S. A. Metabolic differences between Caucasian and African-American children and the relationship to type 2 diabetes mellitus. J Pediatr Endocrinol Metab. 15:509–517, 2002. 35. Zannolli, R., A. Rebeggiani, F. Chiarelli, and G. Morgese. Hyperinsulinism as a marker in obese children. Am J Dis Child. 147:837–841, 1993. 36. Brown, R., M. Sothern, R. Suskind, J. Udall, and U. Blecker. Racial differences in the lipid profiles of obese children and adolescents before and after significant weight loss. Clin Pediatr (Phila). 39:427–431, 2000. 37. Hill, J. and F. Throwbridge. The causes and health consequences of obesity in children and adolescents. Pediatrics. 101:497–575, 1998. 38. Law, C. M., D. J. Barker, C. Osmond, C. H. Fall, and S. J. Simmonds. Early growth and abdominal fatness in adult life. J Epidemiol Community Health. 46:184–186, 1992. 39. Steinbeck, K. The importance of physical activity in the prevention of overweight and obesity in childhood: a review and an opinion. Obes Rev. 2:117–130, 2001. 40. Micic, D. Obesity in children and adolescents — a new epidemic? Consequences in adult life. J Pediatr Endocrinol Metab. 14:1345–1352, 2001. 41. Dietz, W. H. Critical periods in childhood for the development of obesity. Am J Clin Nutr. 59:955–959, 1994. 42. Lohman, T., A. A. Roche, and R. Martorell, Eds. Anthropometric Standardization Reference Manual. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics, 1988. 43. Chobanian, A. V., G. L. Bakris, H. R. Black, W. C. Cushman, L. A. Green, J. L. Izzo, Jr. et al. The Seventh Report of the Joint National Committee on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure: the JNC 7 report. JAMA. 289:2560–2572, 2003. 44. Roche, A., S. B. Heymsfield, and T. G. Lohman, Eds. Human Body Composition. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics, 1996. 45. Durnin, J. V. and J. Womersley. Body fat assessed from total body density and its estimation from skinfold thickness: measurements on 481 men and women aged from 16 to 72 years. Br J Nutr. 32:77–97, 1974. 46. Jackson, A. S. and M. L. Pollock. Generalized equations for predicting body density of men. Br J Nutr. 40:497–504, 1978. 47. Lohman, T. G. Skinfolds and body density and their relation to body fatness: a review. Hum Biol. 53:181–225, 1981. 48. Sloan, A. W. Estimation of body fat in young men. J Appl Physiol. 23:311–315, 1967. 49. Goran, M. I., P. Driscoll, R. Johnson, T. R. Nagy, and G. Hunter. Cross-calibration of body-composition techniques against dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry in young children. Am J Clin Nutr. 63:299–305, 1996. 50. Cameron, N., P. L. Griffiths, M. M. Wright, C. Blencowe, N. C. Davis, J. M. Pettifor, and S. A. Norris. Regression equations to estimate percentage body fat in African prepubertal children aged 9 y. Am J Clin Nutr. 80:70–75, 2004. 51. Bray, G., J. P. DeLaney, D. W. Volaufova, D. W. Harsha, and C. Champaign. Prediction of body fat in 12-y-old African American and white children: evaluation of methods. Am J Clin Nutr. 76:980–990, 2002. 52. Gutin, B., M. Litaker, S. Islam, T. Manos, C. Smith, and F. Treiber. Body-composition measurement in 9-11-y-old children by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry, skinfold-thickness measurements, and bioimpedance analysis. Am J Clin Nutr. 63:287–292, 1996. 53. Slaughter, M. H., T. G. Lohman, R. A. Boileau, C. A. Horswill, R. J. Stillman, M. D. Van Loan, and D. A. Bemben. Skinfold equations for estimation of body fatness in children and youth. Hum Biol. 60:709–723, 1988. 54. Boye, K. R., T. Dimitriou, F. Manz, E. Schoenau, C. Neu, S. Wudy, and T. Remer. Anthropometric assessment of muscularity during growth: estimating fat-free mass with 2 skinfold-thickness measurements is superior to measuring midupper arm muscle area in healthy prepubertal children. Am J Clin Nutr. 76:628–632, 2002. 55. Fors, H., L. Gelander, R. Bjarnason, K. Albertsson-Wikland, and I. Bosaeus. Body composition, as assessed by bioelectrical impedance spectroscopy and dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, in a healthy paediatric population. Acta Paediatr. 91:755–760, 2002. 56. Hoffer, E. C., C. K. Meador, and D. C. Simpson. Correlation of whole-body impedance with total body water volume. J Appl Physiol. 27:531–534, 1969. 57. Eisenkolbl, J., M. Kartasurya, and K. Widhalm. Underestimation of percentage fat mass measured by bioelectrical impedance analysis compared to dual energy X-ray absorptiometry method in obese children. Eur J Clin Nutr. 55:423–429, 2001. 58. Casanova Roman, M., I. Rodriguez Ruiz, S. Rico de Cos, and M. Casanova Bellido. [Body composition analysis using bioelectrical and anthropometric parameters]. An Pediatr (Barc). 61:23–31, 2004.
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Handbook of Pediatric Obesity: Clinical Management 59. Parker, L., J. J. Reilly, C. Slater, J. C. Wells, and Y. Pitsiladis. Validity of six field and laboratory methods for measurement of body composition in boys. Obes Res. 11:852–858, 2003. 60. Morrison, J. A., S. S. Guo, B. Specker, W. C. Chumlea, S. Z. Yanovski, and J. A. Yanovski. Assessing the body composition of 6-17-year-old Black and White girls in field studies. Am J Hum Biol. 13:249–254, 2001. 61. Ogle, G. D., J. R. Allen, and I. R. Humphries. Body-composition assessment by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry in subjects aged 4-26 y. Am J Clin Nutr. 61:746–753, 1995. 62. Pietrobelli A., C. Formica, Z. Wang, and S. Heymsfield. Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry body composition model: review of physical concepts. Am J Physiol. 271:E941–E951, 1996. 63. Friedl, K. E., J. P. DeLuca, L. J. Marchitelli, and J. A. Vogel. Reliability of body-fat estimations from a four-compartment model by using density, body water, and bone mineral measurements. Am J Clin Nutr. 55:764–770, 1992. 64. Mazess, R. B., H. S. Barden, J. P. Bisek, and J. Hanson. Dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry for totalbody and regional bone-mineral and soft-tissue composition. Am J Clin Nutr. 51:1106–1112, 1990. 65. Ellis, K. J., R. J. Shypailo, A. Pratt, and W. G. Pond. Accuracy of dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry for body-composition measurements in children. Am J Clin Nutr. 60:660–665, 1994. 66. Bar-Or, O. A., T. W. Rowland, and W. Thomas. Pediatric Exercise Medicine: From Physiologic Principles to Health Care Application. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics, 2004. 67. McArdle, W. D. and J. R. Magel. Physical work capacity and maximum oxygen uptake in treadmill and bicycle exercise. Med Sci Sports. 2:118–123, 1970. 68. Casaburi, R., S. Spitzer, R. Haskell, and K. Wasserman. Effect of altering heart rate on oxygen uptake at exercise onset. Chest. 95:6–12, 1989. 69. Astrand, P. O., E. Hultman, A. Juhlin-Dannfelt, and G. Reynolds. Disposal of lactate during and after strenuous exercise in humans. J Appl Physiol. 61:338–343, 1986. 70. Mitchell, J. H. and G. Blomqvist. Maximal oxygen uptake. N Engl J Med. 284:1018–1022, 1971. 71. Rowell, L. B., H. L. Taylor, and Y. Wang. Limitations to prediction of maximal oxygen intake. J Appl Physiol. 19:919–927, 1964. 72. Greiwe, J. S., L. A. Kaminsky, M. H. Whaley, and G. B. Dwyer. Evaluation of the ACSM submaximal ergometer test for estimating VO2 max. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 27:1315–1320, 1995. 73. American College of Sports Medicine Position Stand. The recommended quantity and quality of exercise for developing and maintaining cardiorespiratory and muscular fitness, and flexibility in healthy adults, 30(6):975–991, 1998. 74. Rowland, T., R. Bhargava, D. Parslow, and R. A. Heptulla. Cardiac response to progressive cycle exercise in moderately obese adolescent females. J Adolesc Health. 32:422–427, 2003. 75. Rowland, T., L. Koenigs, and N. Miller. Myocardial performance during maximal exercise in adolescents with anorexia nervosa. J Sports Med Phys Fitness. 43:202–208, 2003. 76. Bar-Or, O., Foreyt, J., Bouchard, C. et al. Physical activity, genetic and nutritional considerations in childhood weight management. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 30:2–10, 1998. 77. Astrand, P. O. and B. Saltin. Maximal oxygen uptake and heart rate in various types of muscular activity. J Appl Physiol. 16:977–981, 1961. 78. Rowland, T., G. Kline, D. Goff, L. Martel, and L. Ferrone. One-mile run performance and cardiovascular fitness in children. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 153:845–849, 1999. 79. Falkner, F. and J. Tanner. Human Growth. London: Baillier Tindall, 1979. 80. Carskadon, M. A. and C. Acebo. A self-administered rating scale for pubertal development. J Adolesc Health. 14:190–195, 1993. 81. Falkner, B. and S. Michel. Obesity and other risk factors in children. Ethn Dis. 9:284–289, 1999. 82. Rippe, J. M. and S. Hess. The role of physical activity in the prevention and management of obesity. J Am Diet Assoc. 98:S31–S38, 1998. 83. Epstein, L. H. and G. S. Goldfield. Physical activity in the treatment of childhood overweight and obesity: current evidence and research issues. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 31:S553–S559, 1999. 84. Gortmaker, S. L., K. Peterson, J. Wiecha, A. M. Sobol, S. Dixit, M. K. Fox, and N. Laird. Reducing obesity via a school-based interdisciplinary intervention among youth: Planet Health. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 153:409–418, 1999. 85. Wang, L., Q. Yang, R. Lowry, and H. Wechsler. Economic analysis of a school-based obesity prevention program. Obes Res. 11:1313–1324, 2003.
Section 3 Psychosocial and Physical Considerations
Considerations 5 Psychosocial during Treatment Jeffrey B. Schwimmer CONTENTS Introduction ......................................................................................................................................55 Underlying/Comorbid Psychopathology..........................................................................................56 Depression ..............................................................................................................................56 Anxiety ...................................................................................................................................56 Eating Disorders .....................................................................................................................56 Family Psychosocial Issues .............................................................................................................57 Family Structure .....................................................................................................................58 Child–Parent Conflicts............................................................................................................58 Relationships between Child Abuse and Obesity ..................................................................58 Culture as It Influences Body Type Images and Dietary Preferences ..................................59 Psychosocial Consequences.............................................................................................................59 Peer Teasing............................................................................................................................59 School .....................................................................................................................................60 Quality of Life........................................................................................................................61 Psychosocial Tools ...........................................................................................................................61 Cognitive Behavioral Therapy................................................................................................61 Knowledge and Self-Efficacy.................................................................................................61 Behavioral Counseling ...........................................................................................................62 Motivational Interviewing ......................................................................................................63 Conclusion........................................................................................................................................63 References ........................................................................................................................................64
INTRODUCTION Psychosocial factors influence the development of obesity, its comorbidities, and the ability to follow clinical recommendations for therapies, including lifestyle modification. The key components from a psychosocial perspective are to conduct a focused yet complete assessment, to consider psychosocial status as an important clinical outcome, and to successfully use psychosocial tools to enhance the efficacy of weight management [1–3]. Behavioral therapy provides tools to overcome barriers in making lasting dietary and activity changes. Although not effective in isolation, behavioral therapy has been shown to be an important component of successful weight management. There are many psychosocial factors that clinicians must consider when administering behavioral therapy to overweight children and their families. These factors can include underlying/comorbid psychopathologies, family psychosocial issues, and psychosocial consequences. These factors will be discussed in this chapter, in addition to psychosocial tools that may be employed while administering behavioral therapy to these overweight children and families. 55
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UNDERLYING/COMORBID PSYCHOPATHOLOGY Psychopathology has been indicated as a possible contributing factor in the development of pediatric obesity [4]. Psychopathological symptoms often found in conjunction with pediatric obesity include depression, anxiety, and eating disorders. Although psychopathology may be more common in overweight children [4], it has been identified as the key cause of obesity in only a small number of overweight children. Clinicians should be aware of some of the more common symptoms associated with psychopathology, such as poor concentration, low motivation, and social withdrawal [1]. Aggression and behavioral problems are also commonly witnessed with these mental disorders [4]. In a study conducted by Erermis et al. [4], 27% of clinically obese and non-clinically obese adolescents were diagnosed with depressive disorders, compared with only 6% of the normal-weight control group. In general, the frequency of diagnosis of various mental disorders such as depression, anxiety, binge eating, and hyperactivity was significantly higher in the obese adolescents than the youths of normal weight [4].
DEPRESSION Depressed mood among adolescents is a risk factor for the development and persistence of obesity. However, the relationship between obesity and depression remains controversial. Whether one condition directly contributes to the other or whether they co-exist due to overlapping but noncausal mechanisms remains unresolved. It is clear, however, that the treatment of one condition can affect the other. The successful treatment of obesity can lead a decrease in symptoms of depression. In contrast, medications used to treat depression have the potential to produce weight gain. In cases of major depression it is usually necessary to adequately treat depression before a patient is able to successfully participate in a program of lasting lifestyle modification for weight management.
ANXIETY Anxiety in overweight children is often observed in conjunction with more common psychological disorders such as depression, poor self-esteem, and social isolation/withdrawal. Situations or events that may trigger anxiety in overweight children are not easily identified. In a study conducted by Morgan et al. [7], overweight children who reported episodes of uncontrollable eating were found to have much higher levels of anxiety. Binge eaters also displayed increased feelings of depression and poor self-esteem compared with overweight children who did not report binge-eating episodes [5]. Although anxiety is not currently identified as a sole contributing factor in pediatric obesity, a common test that can be used for screening is the Revised Children’s Manifest Anxiety Scale [6]. Of additional concern is that overweight children are more likely to engage in risky behaviors and to experience psychosocial distress. This detrimental behavior may be associated with the consequences of being overweight. These consequences include weight discrimination, negative stereotyping, and pressure to conform to certain body ideals [7]. In extreme cases, overweight children may develop eating disorders.
EATING DISORDERS Eating disorders are associated with cycles of weight loss and regain and are considered the exhibition of extreme weight behavior [8]. Disorders include anorexia nervosa, bulimia, and binge eating [8]. These types of extreme dieting can be devastating to a child’s life. The child can often experience both physical and psychological consequences. These include menstrual irregularities for girls, decrease in self-esteem, poor concentration, growth retardation, delayed sexual maturation, and disturbed sleep patterns [8]. As with many other comorbid psychosocial factors, eating disorders
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can also predispose the child to other risky behaviors: alcohol and drug abuse, smoking, promiscuity, autoaggression, and suicide [9]. Eating disorders are an expression of psychosocial factors rather than an expression of how a child feels about his or her body [8]. It is thought that lack of family support and connectedness contribute to this behavior [10]. In a study by Fairburn et al. [10], families of bulimic patients were found to exhibit abusive tendencies. Another study by Hodges et al. [11] determined that families of binge-eating patients scored high in family conflict. In short, family dysfunction has been found to increase the tendency for children to develop negative self-esteem, which may lead to extreme weight behaviors [12]. The link between family dysfunction and unhealthy weight behavior was identified in a study by Fonseca and colleagues [8]. The study consisted of 9402 students, 12 to 18 years of age. Of that number, 4625 were girls, and 4417 were boys. Adolescents with body mass index (BMI) values of less than 10 or more than 50 were excluded, as well as any who were of significantly short stature. These students were asked to complete a survey comprising questions about health, risky behaviors, and protective factors. Health factors included dieting and exercising. Risky behaviors included vomiting; taking diet pills, laxatives, or diuretics; and excessive exercise. Protective factors included family communication, parental supervision and monitoring, family connectedness, and perceived caring and communication with other adults and friends. Behaviors were assessed over a 1-week period, during which each question began with: “During the last week …”. Overall, 38.2% of girls versus 12.4% of boys reported dieting in that past week. In addition, girls exceeded boys in trying to lose weight through exercise: 61.1% versus 42.8%. Likewise, more girls were found vomiting (4.0% vs. 1.7%) and using diet pills (3.8% vs. 1.1%). Gender did not, however, affect the use of laxatives and diuretics. Interestingly, it was also found that risk factors included high parental supervision/monitoring. Both groups had a high risk factor when linked with sexual abuse histories [8]. In a study by Grignard et al. [13], a group of 31 obese adolescents were administered a questionnaire and a body dissatisfaction test and were interviewed regarding weight and body image. Although a relationship between weight and self-image was established, the direction of causality was not determined [13]. Therefore, the results did not confirm whether weight loss improves the body image or improving self-esteem results in weight loss. Although psychopathological problems are more prevalent in overweight children, not all overweight children experience these problems. Clinicians may wish to use some common psychiatric screening methods, including the Child Behavior Checklist, Children Depression Inventory, Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale, and Eating Attitude Tests [4]. A description of these tools and methods of application is given by Johnson and von Almen in Chapter 9 of this volume.
FAMILY PSYCHOSOCIAL ISSUES The family serves as the foundation for the development of a child’s mental well-being. Problems within the home environment may manifest through eating disorders and excessive weight gain. In a study by Epstein et al. [14], the mental health of the parent and stability of family relationships were some of the strongest predictors of the child‘s mental health. Myers et al. [3] supported this view in a study that particularly focused on the mother–child relationship. This study found a reciprocal relationship between the psychological health of the mother and that of the child, with psychological improvement in either case resulting in benefits to the other. Stradmeijer and colleagues [15] evaluated 143 children and their parents — 73 overweight and 70 normal weight — to examine the relationship between family functioning and psychosocial adjustment. Results indicated that the older overweight girls displayed a lower self-esteem than the younger girls. In contrast, the boys’ self-esteem improved with age. In addition, the parents of overweight children reported more negative behavior issues than those of normal weight children. Excessive parental attention was cited as a potential reason for children to develop this negative
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behavior. More research is needed to determine the relationship between “parental over-concern” and the social and emotional issues of overweight children [15].
FAMILY STRUCTURE It was previously mentioned in the chapter that environmental factors have a large effect on unhealthy weight behavior. One such important factor is family structure, as it relates to eating behavior. In a recent study [16], the relationship of family structure and frequency of fast food restaurant use was examined. The results indicated that family structure affects young women more than young men. Specifically, females of single-parent families more often indulged in fast food restaurant dining [16]. By the year 1998, 27% of all households with children were single-parent homes. This higher frequency of fast food visits by females may be attributed to the fact that more women are working, and therefore, less time is available to them for food preparation. As a consequence, because of this larger number of working, single-family households with children, an increasingly larger portion of children are consuming fast food on a regular basis [16], which may indirectly contribute to pediatric obesity.
CHILD–PARENT CONFLICTS The relationship between a parent and child can have a significant effect on the behaviors of that child. Mellin et al. [7] compared overweight and nonoverweight adolescents on selected physical activity and dietary behaviors. They also compared the adolescents’ behaviors with their family relationships. The overweight girls and boys both engaged in significantly higher levels of unhealthy behaviors compared with the normal-weight children. In addition, an inverse relationship was observed between family connectedness and unhealthy behaviors. Fonseca et al. [8] examined the association between familial factors and extreme weight control in adolescents. It was observed that family connectedness served as a protective factor for girls displaying extreme weight behaviors. In addition, connectedness to not only parents but also other adults and friends served as a protective factor for boys. In girls, high levels of parental guidance and supervision accounted for protection against extreme weight behaviors; in boys, the opposite was observed [8]. Parental conflicts, including a lack of parental-expressed empathy/affection, were found to be a factor in binge eating relapse [17]. In addition, adolescents exhibiting hostile attitudes toward their family also were found to experience relapses in binge eating [17]. To reduce behavioral and psychological risk factors that lead to pediatric obesity, a healthy parent–child relationship is essential during childhood.
RELATIONSHIPS
BETWEEN
CHILD ABUSE
AND
OBESITY
Abuse significantly affects the behavior patterns of developing children. Both physical and emotional abuse can lead to unhealthy habits. Although some children and adolescents are able to look to friends or family for assistance, others seek to control themselves through extreme dieting or obsession with food [8]. In a recent review article, Gustafson and Sarwer [18] found that childhood sexual abuse may lead to depression, anxiety, substance abuse, and eating disorders. Few studies have concentrated on the relationship between sexual abuse and pediatric obesity. Childhood sexual abuse has been linked to adult weight problems that may be a result of bingeeating disorders (BED). Williamson et al. [19] investigated the associations between self-reported abuse in childhood and adult body weight and risk of obesity. In those who experienced physical and verbal abuse, body weight and obesity were strongly related. Moreover, as the severity of the abuse increased, so did the risk for obesity. Thus, targeting or preventing abuse during childhood may potentially decrease the progression of obesity into adulthood. Grilo and Masheb [20] examined the relationship of maltreatment and BED in 145 diagnosed adults. Subjects were administered a childhood trauma questionnaire [20] to assess emotional,
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physical, and sexual abuse as well as emotional and physical neglect. A total of 83% reported some form of maltreatment during childhood, and the results did not differ by gender or current obesity status. Emotional abuse was the only form of maltreatment that was significantly associated with psychological variables such as greater body dissatisfaction, higher depression, and lower selfesteem. The findings of Grilo and Masheb were consistent with previous studies. Childhood maltreatment is associated with psychological distress in general. However, whether there is a specific association with weight or eating disorder symptomatology in children is unknown.
CULTURE
AS IT INFLUENCES
BODY TYPE IMAGES
AND
DIETARY PREFERENCES
Many cultures set standards as to what they believe defines beauty in individuals. Often, body type images are unrealistic and harmful. Research indicates that those who try to conform to their culture’s idea of body image will be more prone to developing eating disorders. Perez and Joiner [21] examined body image dissatisfaction and disordered eating in a small group of both black and white college women based solely on their self-perceptions. Of the women surveyed, the ideal body image size was larger for black women than for white women. The results also indicated that white women reported themselves to be overweight, whereas black women reported being underweight compared with ideal body image size. These perceptions indicate that dissatisfaction with body size may result in differing eating disorders. Although white women may binge and purge, black women may only binge, resulting in malnourishment and obesity, respectively. This is not to say that white women are more likely to have eating disorders compared with black women, but each group may develop eating disorders to either lose or gain weight to fit their culture’s mold. To combat these problems, cultures need to encourage realistic and healthy body images [21]. An individual’s perception of an ideal body image is greatly influenced by television and advertisements. The public connects with the characters on television and looks to them as role models for how they should appear. A study conducted by Greenberg et al. [22] used an evaluation of prime-time television to identify body type characteristics. The study found that 14% of the female and 24% of the male characters viewed were overweight or obese. These characters were most commonly considered less attractive and unlikely to have romantic partners or show physical affection, and they were shown eating more than the normal-weight characters. On the contrary, 87% of the women viewed during the study were of average weight or underweight. In reality, however, only about half of all women in the United States are average weight or underweight. In real life men are three times more likely to be obese than their television peers; male television characters were six times more likely to be underweight than their counterparts in real life. These findings illustrate that television may promote a negative self-concept in overweight individuals. When overweight individuals compare themselves with television characters, they may incorrectly associate large body types with negative appearance status and behavior.
PSYCHOSOCIAL CONSEQUENCES PEER TEASING Peer teasing is a problem that affects all children, not just the overweight or obese. It is estimated that up to three-quarters of children suffer from some type of peer teasing [23]. Peer teasing is characterized by the domination of one person over another, with the intent to harm repeatedly [24]. Specifically, peer teasing is usually referred to as bullying, harassment, or victimization [23]. In the case of the overweight or obese, it is referred to as weight-based teasing [13,25]. Grignard and colleagues [13] use the term “peer mockery” to define a psychosocial consequence resulting from weight. In U.S. culture, there is a strong emphasis placed on body size and shape. This emphasis may explain why overweight children are commonly victims of weight-based teasing [25]. Weight-based teasing is the means by which peers expose the physical differences of overweight and obese
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individuals, particularly in children [26]. Inevitably, weight-based teasing can become harmful to an child’s well-being [25]. Little public attention has been given to weight-based teasing; however, with the increase of obesity in children [23,25,26], more research is dedicated to examining the potentially harmful effects of weight-based teasing. Janssen et al. (2004) [28] examined the association between weight-based teasing and weight status (BMI) in children 11 to 16 years of age. It was observed that as teasing increased, BMI increased. Social problems, such as self-induced isolation, are associated with psychosocial factors of being overweight or obese [23,25,26]. These factors include low body satisfaction, self-esteem issues, and comorbidities, such as depressive tendencies. Thus, weight-based teasing may increase loneliness, sadness, and unhappiness about weight [23]. Possibly, because of a resulting low-body image, overweight children seek isolation [26]. This self-induced isolation leads to ineffective bonding, which leads to separation from peers [26]. Combined, weight-based teasing and a depressive state can lead to suicidal thoughts or attempts [23,25]. This occurrence was noted in a study by Eisenberg and Aalsma [23], who reported that weight-based teasing increased suicidal attempts to two to three times higher in adolescents who were teased compared with those who were not. Psychosocial problems associated with weight-based teasing intensify negative short-term and long-term outcomes for overweight and obese adolescents. Short-term outcomes include low academic success and poor high school performance. Long-term outcomes include lower marriage rates and lower income [7,23,26,27].
SCHOOL In the school environment, overweight children may be victims of negative stereotyping. These negative stereotypes include inaccurate perceptions by peers, teachers, and administrators that overweight children are lazy, stupid, and lack motivation [28]. In turn, this leads to a stronger expectation for slimmer, fit individuals to achieve high scores in intelligence testing and education [29]. Overweight children and adolescents are found to be four times more likely than healthy children and adolescents to report impaired school function [30]. These results were substantiated by a study in Thailand, which reported that overweight children and adolescents in grades 7 through 9 were twice as likely to have low grades in math and language as healthy children and adolescents [31]. Poor academic success includes poor grades, poor attitude toward school, and poor attendance [23]. It is plausible that weight-based teasing contributes to the development of poor academic success by causing overweight children to further develop low self-esteem [23]. In turn, low selfesteem may further perpetuate poor academic performance, which includes poor grades, poor attitude toward school, and poor attendance [23]. Low self-esteem promotes poor academic performance because the child may come to believe less and less in his or her abilities. Therefore, it is imperative to intervene and address weight-based teasing as soon as possible [7,23,25,26]. Intervention can include alteration of school rules, peer-teasing training for teachers, open forums and discussions in classrooms on the subject, individual meetings, and extracurricular activities to enhance bonding [23]. Other extreme measures, such as legislation, should also be considered, especially when efforts to communicate with school administration have failed. In a recent study, Latner and Stunkard [32] reported that the stigmatization of obese children has significantly increased over the last 40 years. The overt discrimination of obese youth may limit both their educational aspirations and achievements [7]. Research indicates that overweight children assess their school performance and educational futures lower than do normal-weight children [7]. This perceived low expectation may influence school attrition. We recently reported [30] that obese children and adolescents involved in our study missed a mean of 4.2 days of school in the month before the study. These missed days of school could lead to decreased school performance, with possible long-term consequences. Research has also linked overweight adolescents, especially girls, with fewer years of school completed [27]. Missed school days may subsequently lead to decreased school performance. The negative impact of educational disturbances
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may be long lasting. Overweight adolescent girls are less likely to attend college and as adults go on to have lower household income than their peers who were normal weight as adolescents. The implications of not attending college and not achieving higher-education status may also serve to explain why overweight adolescents, as adults, have lower household income than adults who were normal weight as adolescents [26,27].
QUALITY
OF
LIFE
In the last few years, research has shown that overweight children and adolescents experience a lower health-related quality-of-life (HRQL) [30,33,35]. Quality of Life includes the social, emotional, and physical functioning of a person [36]. Recently, we reported [30] that severely obese children and adolescents had a lower HRQL than healthy children and adolescents. We also compared these severely obese children and adolescents with children and adolescents with cancer because cancer is a chronic health condition with known impaired HRQL. We observed that the severely obese children and adolescents had a similar HRQL as the children and adolescents diagnosed with cancer. Although obese children and adolescents may also experience physical limitations and teasing from peers, they are often not exposed to the intense medical interventions (and subsequent adverse effects) that are common in pediatric cancer. Thus, the impaired HRQL of the obese sample was an unexpected and significant finding [30]. This impaired HRQL can cause difficulties in keeping up with peers and maintaining normal activities [37] and can also result in teasing and withdrawal from peers at school [36]. Such changes can be seen in school-aged children with mild obesity.
PSYCHOSOCIAL TOOLS COGNITIVE BEHAVIORAL THERAPY The comprehensive framework of a cognitive-behavioral weight management program involves understanding health-related behaviors and modifying those behaviors that are linked to adverse health effects [38]. Behavioral treatments for pediatric obesity should focus on modifying behaviors that bear on health and illness. These can involve issues such as improving dietary choices, decreasing sedentary behaviors, and increasing habitual physical activity and exercise. It is important to focus on the patient’s attitudes and beliefs about weight loss while building a partnership with the patient. The physician or health professional should assist the patient in modifying current behaviors and setting achievable goals. As with other behavior therapies, the patient’s readiness to change should be assessed and discussed, in addition to identifying potential variables associated with weight loss. Several concepts should be discussed with the patient, in particular, body image and unrealistic weight loss expectations. Cognitive-behavioral treatment can also be used to help overweight children become more assertive in coping with the adverse social stigma of being overweight. This can not only enhance their self-esteem but also reduce their dissatisfaction with their body image, regardless of their weight loss [38]. In a recent study, Warschburger et al. developed and evaluated a cognitive-behavioral training program for obese children and adolescents. The training program was effective in teaching the children and adolescents ways to manage their weight status and to deal with associated psychosocial problems [39].
KNOWLEDGE
AND
SELF-EFFICACY
Knowledge has not been shown to be sufficient as a motivating tool when trying to change a behavior [40]. This is particularly important when attempting to change diet and become physically active [41]. In this case, simply providing the patient with information that will help him or her lose weight, or handing out pamphlets with sample exercises to undertake, has not been shown to successfully alter behavior [41]. There are several factors that contribute to this lack of success.
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One such barrier is the “cognitive barrier.” In the cognitive barrier, a lack of knowledge, low selfefficacy, and a limited acceptance of personal risk can greatly affect a person’s desire to change [41]. Environment is also important in behavior change and can many times lead to program failure. For example, an overweight child will likely fail if the parents are not supportive and continue to stock the house with high-fat foods. There are also environments outside of the home that offer cheap convenience food, such as movie theaters and shopping malls [41]. The suburban and urban way of life demands the use of a car for transportation to be able to function. Other environmental barriers to successful implementation include lack of access to care and social support for change, and social and cultural factors such as fast food, sedentary lifestyles, and food preferences [41]. A lack of motivation can also prevent the obese patient from changing his or her behavior. Many times this motivational barrier is deep-set in emotional fears. The fear of giving up a “behavioral crutch” can sometimes limit a person who is trying to change his or her lifestyle. Relapses are also cause for emotional/motivational barriers to behavioral changes. A person may feel that “this is hopeless” because instead of losing weight, he or she has gained weight, or perhaps has put on several pounds after having lost a solid amount. This failure to change may lead to shame, demoralization, and helplessness [41].
BEHAVIORAL COUNSELING There are several health behavioral change models that are currently practiced. These change models can be applied to altering behavior in physical activity and diet. One such model is the social learning model, which is concerned with a person’s attitude toward change. This change model has been found to have an effect on cognitive, interpersonal, and environmental factors, which in turn have influenced behavior [42]. To apply this change model to physical activity and diet behavior, individuals proceed through a series of steps: self-monitoring, self-analysis, self-management, and replacement of unhealthy behavior [41]. The self-monitoring step typically includes keeping a food diary. The self-analysis step includes the discussion of reasons for amounts of food intake during the day. During the selfmanagement step, the individual identifies certain moods and clues that indicate a need for excess food. The last step — the replacement of unhealthy behavior, such as eating high-fat foods — is the most challenging step. During this last step, adding incentives to replacing the unhealthy behavior is shown to increase success. Another factor addressed in the social learning model is the management of stress. With successful management of eating and physical activity, overweight individuals increase self-confidence in their ability to gain control over specific behaviors [41]. This would, in turn, reduce their stress level. Self-efficacy states that the greater the perceived ability to maintain a behavior, the greater the actual occurrences of that healthy behavior. Thus, positive self-efficacy with diet and physical change is a very important factor in weight management. Self-efficacy also influences the treatment of depression and the reduction of stress — both psychosocial factors that affect obesity. Behavioral therapy has been shown to be effective even when done briefly [41]. The Worcester Area Trial for Counseling in Hyperlipidemia study is an example of how brief counseling can provide positive results in weight loss [41]. During the study, physicians were given 8 minutes with each patient. Study patients received either counseling alone (control) or counseling combined with handouts and questionnaires concerning dieting (treatment) while in the waiting rooms [6]. A year later, treatment patients were found to have lost 2.3 kg more than the control and, as a benefit of that loss, to have lowered their cholesterol by 3.8 mg [41]. Several other techniques, such as contracting, have been identified to improve self-care and manage weight. Contracting is the actual writing down of patient goals. Also, providing the patient with small, controllable tasks is another way to allow for success that helps sustain motivation. Finally, it is extremely important to give feedback to the patient, to establish a social support group, and to
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keep track of the patient’s commitment [41]. Remember, though, that the key is to identify the patient’s specific problems to correctly assess which techniques to employ. It is the physician’s responsibility to ask the patient to identify barriers to changing eating or physical activity behaviors. Along with social support, another important aid is using a team approach in physician intervention. Not only should the primary care physician be involved but also nurses, psychologists, dietitians, and social workers. Such a team is necessary because behavioral interventions tend to require relatively large amounts of professional time [41].
MOTIVATIONAL INTERVIEWING Motivational interviewing (MI) is a technique that originated in the field of substance abuse treatment [43]. The foundation of MI is a nonconfrontational, patient-based counseling approach to behavior change [44], rather than a provider-directed approach [45]. Although MI has been used mainly in the substance abuse realm, MI employs techniques that may be applicable to a variety of behavior changes [43]. Recent studies have suggested the use of MI in health promotion and disease management [46]. VanWormer and Boucher [46] suggest four guiding principles of MI. The first principle is to express empathy. The health professional should listen to the patient with respect and expect ambivalence and reluctance to change [43]. The second guideline involves discrepancy development [48]. Developing discrepancy involves reviewing the pros and cons of behavior change [43]. The health professional should call attention to a current behavior pattern and future goals, thus increasing motivation from the patient for a lifestyle change [46]. The third principle is rolling with resistance [46]. Although resistance should be expected, the health professional should try to steer this resistance to motivation [43]. The health professional should try to provoke a new perspective from the patient [46]. The fourth and final guideline is to support self-efficacy [46]. Because a patient’s self-efficacy is one of the greatest predictors of treatment outcome [46], the patient’s autonomy and confidence should be encouraged and supported by the health professional [43]. Some of the same principles addressed earlier in this chapter and in Chapter 14, such as selfefficacy and readiness to change assessments, can be employed in MI. To successfully use MI, the health professional should develop his or her interaction techniques. These involve such skills as asking open-ended questions, affirming statements of recognition, and reflective listening [43]. These techniques will help create an environment in which the patient feels at ease to discuss what is important to him or her [45]. MI may be particularly useful in the medical setting because it offers a briefer, alternative approach for intervening with patients (with some meetings as brief as 20 minutes), compared with psychotherapy (typically a series of 50-minute settings) [43].
CONCLUSION Consideration of psychosocial factors is a common recommendation in a comprehensive approach to pediatric weight management. This chapter provides a framework for thinking about the different elements encompassed within the psychosocial domain. A challenge is to appreciate that common themes are present among many obese children presenting for weight management but that for any one child the specific set of contributing factors is unique. Furthermore, the resources available to make lifestyle changes as well as the barriers to change that are present must be appropriately identified. The high prevalence of pediatric obesity and the tremendous diversity of the clinical population require both a structured and flexible approach at the same time. Herein lies the foundation of patient-centered care as well as a broad opportunity for future research addressing fundamental unanswered questions.
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REFERENCES 1. Fabricatore, A. N. and T. A. Wadden. Psychological aspects of obesity. Clin Dermatol. 22:332–337, 2004. 2. Zeller, M., S. Kirk, R. Claytor, P. Khoury, J. Grieme, M. Santangelo, and S. Daniels. Predictors of attrition from a pediatric weight management program. J Pediatr. 144:466–470, 2004. 3. Myers, M. D., H. A. Raynor, and L. H. Epstein. Predictors of child psychological changes during family-based treatment for obesity. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 152:855–861, 1998. 4. Erermis, S., N. Cetin, M. Tamar, N. Bukusoglu, F. Akdeniz, and D. Goksen. Is obesity a risk factor for psychopathology among adolescents? Pediatr Int. 46:296–301, 2004. 5. Morgan, C. M., S. Z. Yanovski, T. T. Nguyen, J. McDuffie, N. G. Sebring, M. R. Jorge et al. Loss of control over eating, adiposity, and psychopathology in overweight children. Int J Eat Disord. 31:430–441, 2002. 6. Strauss, R. S., D. Rodzilsky, G. Burack, and M. Colin. Psychosocial correlates of physical activity in healthy children. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 155:897–902, 2001. 7. Mellin, A. E., D. Neumark-Sztainer, M. Story, M. Ireland, and M. D. Resnick. Unhealthy behaviors and psychosocial difficulties among overweight adolescents: the potential impact of familial factors. J Adolesc Health. 31:145–153, 2002. 8. Fonseca, H., M. Ireland, and M. D. Resnick. Familial correlates of extreme weight control behaviors among adolescents. Int J Eat Disord. 32:441–448, 2002. 9. Kiess, W., A. Galler, A. Reich, G. Muller, T. Kapellen, J. Deutscher et al. Clinical aspects of obesity in childhood and adolescence. Obes Rev. 2:29–36, 2001. 10. Fairburn, C. G., S. L. Welch, H. A. Doll, B. A. Davies, and M. E. O’Connor. Risk factors for bulimia nervosa. A community-based case-control study. Arch Gen Psychiatry. 54:509–517, 1997. 11. Hodges, E. L., C. E. Cochrane, and T. D. Brewerton. Family characteristics of binge-eating disorder patients. Int J Eat Disord. 23:145–151, 1998. 12. Leung, F., A. Schwartzman, and H. Steiger. Testing a dual-process family model in understanding the development of eating pathology: a structural equation modeling analysis. Int J Eat Disord. 20:367–375, 1996. 13. Grignard, S., Bourguignon, J., Michel, B., Philippe, M., and Chantal, V. Characteristics of Adolescent Attempts to Manage Overweight. Elsevier Science Ireland, 2002. 14. Epstein, L. H., K. R. Klein, and L. Wisniewski. Child and parent factors that influence psychological problems in obese children. Int J Eat Disord. 15:151–158, 1994. 15. Stradmeijer, M., J. Bosch, W. Koops, and J. Seidell. Family functioning and psychosocial adjustment in overweight youngsters. Int J Eat Disord. 27:110–114, 2000. 16. French, S. A., M. Story, D. Neumark-Sztainer, J. A. Fulkerson, and P. Hannan. Fast food restaurant use among adolescents: associations with nutrient intake, food choices and behavioral and psychosocial variables. Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord. 25:1823–1833, 2001. 17. Strober, M., R. Freeman, and W. Morrell. The long-term course of severe anorexia nervosa in adolescents: survival analysis of recovery, relapse, and outcome predictors over 10–15 years in a prospective study. Int J Eat Disord. 22:339–360, 1997. 18. Gustafson, T. B. and D. B. Sarwer. Childhood sexual abuse and obesity. Obes Rev. 5:129–135, 2004. 19. Williamson, D. F., T. J. Thompson, R. F. Anda, W. H. Dietz, and V. Felitti. Body weight and obesity in adults and self-reported abuse in childhood. Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord. 26:1075–1082, 2002. 20. Grilo, C. M. and R. M. Masheb. Childhood psychological, physical, and sexual maltreatment in outpatients with binge eating disorder: frequency and associations with gender, obesity, and eatingrelated psychopathology. Obes Res. 9:320–325, 2001. 21. Perez, M. and T. E. Joiner, Jr. Body image dissatisfaction and disordered eating in black and white women. Int J Eat Disord. 33:342–350, 2003. 22. Greenberg, B. S., M. Eastin, L. Hofschire, K. Lachlan, and K. D. Brownell. Portrayals of overweight and obese individuals on commercial television. Am J Public Health. 93:1342–1348, 2003. 23. Eisenberg, M. E. and M. C. Aalsma. Bullying and peer victimization: position paper of the Society for Adolescent Medicine. J Adolesc Health. 36:88–91, 2005. 24. Camodeca, M. and F. A. Goossens. Aggression, social cognitions, anger and sadness in bullies and victims. J Child Psychol Psychiat. 46:186–197, 2005.
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25. Eisenberg, M. E., D. Neumark-Sztainer, and M. Story. Associations of weight-based teasing and emotional well-being among adolescents. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 157:733–738, 2003. 26. Janssen, I., W. M. Craig, W. F. Boyce, and W. Pickett. Associations between overweight and obesity with bullying behaviors in school-aged children. Pediatrics. 113:1187–1194, 2004. 27. Gortmaker, S. L., A. Must, J. M. Perrin, A. M. Sobol, and W. H. Dietz. Social and economic consequences of overweight in adolescence and young adulthood. N Engl J Med. 329:1008–1012, 1993. 28. Wang, S. S., K. D. Brownell, and T. A. Wadden. The influence of the stigma of obesity on overweight individuals. Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord. 28:1333–1337, 2004. 29. Halkjaer, J., C. Holst, and T. I. Sorensen. Intelligence test score and educational level in relation to BMI changes and obesity. Obes Res. 11:1238–1245, 2003. 30. Schwimmer, J. B., T. M. Burwinkle, and J. W. Varni. Health-related quality of life of severely obese children and adolescents. JAMA. 289:1813–1819, 2003. 31. Mo-suwan, L., L. Lebel, A. Puetpaiboon, and C. Junjana. School performance and weight status of children and young adolescents in a transitional society in Thailand. Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord. 23:272–277, 1999. 32. Latner, J. D. and A. J. Stunkard. Getting worse: the stigmatization of obese children. Obes Res. 11:452–456, 2003. 33. Friedlander, S. L., E. K. Larkin, C. L. Rosen, T. M. Palermo, and S. Redline. Decreased quality of life associated with obesity in school-aged children. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 157:1206–1211, 2003. 34. Swallen, K. C., E. N. Reither, S. A. Haas, and A. M. Meier. Overweight, obesity, and health-related quality of life among adolescents: the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. Pediatrics. 115:340–347, 2005. 35. Hesketh, K., E. Waters, J. Green, L. Salmon, and J. Williams. Healthy eating, activity and obesity prevention: a qualitative study of parent and child perceptions in Australia. Health Promot Int. 20:19–26, 2005. 36. Varni, J. W., M. Seid, and P. S. Kurtin. PedsQL 4.0: reliability and validity of the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory version 4.0 generic core scales in healthy and patient populations. Med Care. 39:800–812, 2001. 37. Spirito, A., D. DeLawyer, and L. Stark. Peer relations and social adjustment of chronically ill children and adolescents. Psychol Rev. 11:539–564, 1991. 38. Wisotsky, W. and C. Swencionis. Cognitive-behavioral approaches in the management of obesity. Adolesc Med. 14:37–48, 2003. 39. Warschburger, P., C. Fromme, F. Petermann, N. Wojtalla, and J. Oepen. Conceptualisation and evaluation of a cognitive-behavioural training programme for children and adolescents with obesity. Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord. 25(Suppl 1):S93–S95, 2001. 40. Baranowski, T., K. W. Cullen, T. Nicklas, D. Thompson, and J. Baranowski. Are current health behavioral change models helpful in guiding prevention of weight gain efforts? Obes Res. 11(Suppl):23S–43S, 2003. 41. Pickering, T., L. Clemow, K. Davidson, and W. Gerin. Behavioral cardiology — has its time finally arrived? Mt Sinai J Med. 70:101–112, 2003. 42. Bandura, A. Social Foundations on Thought and Action: A Social Cognition Theory. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1986. 43. Sindelar, H. A., A. M. Abrantes, C. Hart, W. Lewander, and A. Spirito. Motivational interviewing in pediatric practice. Curr Probl Pediatr Adolesc Health Care. 34:322–339, 2004. 44. Channon, S., M. V. Huws-Thomas, S. Rollnick, and J. W. Gregory. The potential of motivational interviewing. Diabet Med. 22:353, 2005. 45. Ossman, S. S. Motivational interviewing: a process to encourage behavioral change. Nephrol Nurs J. 31:346–347, 2004. 46. VanWormer, J. J. and J. L. Boucher. Motivational interviewing and diet modification: a review of the evidence. Diabetes Educ. 30:404–406, 408–410, 414–416 passim, 2004.
and Strengths 6 Weaknesses in the Response of the Obese Child to Exercise Connie VanVrancken-Tompkins, Melinda S. Sothern, and Oded Bar-Or CONTENTS Introduction ......................................................................................................................................67 Responses of the Obese Child to Exercise......................................................................................68 Aerobic Performance..............................................................................................................68 Energy Cost of Locomotion...................................................................................................69 Muscle Strength......................................................................................................................69 Motor Performance.................................................................................................................70 Rating of Perceived Exertion .................................................................................................71 Implications of Exercise Prescription..............................................................................................71 Activities Suitable for the Obese Child .................................................................................71 Activities Less Suitable for the Obese Child ........................................................................72 Summary ..........................................................................................................................................72 References ........................................................................................................................................73
INTRODUCTION The clinical management of obese children continues to be a frustrating experience for most families and pediatric health care professionals [1]. This may, in part, be a result of the lack of consistent professional guidelines for nutrition and — especially — exercise therapy. To date, no one professional medical organization provides specific recommendations for intensity, duration, frequency, or modality of exercise for the management of pediatric obesity [2–7]. Pediatric health care professionals must thus rely on the available scientific literature when determining initial exercise recommendations for obese children. Pediatric exercise science research indicates that there are both advantages and disadvantages to the obese child during physical activity [8]. Obese children typically display advanced physical (bone age and density [9]) and sexual maturation (increased sexual hormone levels [9,10]), promoting increased body mass and height [11]. This may provide a technical advantage during physical activities and sports in which enhanced height and arm span provide an advantage, such as in football, shot put, volleyball, and basketball [8]. In addition, because of their higher ratio of fat to lean body mass, obese children are more buoyant than their healthy-weight peers. This provides an advantage during water-based games and other swimming activities. Furthermore, obese children are more thermally insulated and, therefore, are able to perform for longer durations in cooler water. Despite these advantages, obesity in children is associated with low levels of physical
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fitness [12] and reduced speed and agility. Thus, obese children are often unable to perform certain physical activities as well as their normal weight peers.
RESPONSES OF THE OBESE CHILD TO EXERCISE AEROBIC PERFORMANCE Research indicates that overweight children respond differently both physically and emotionally to exercise than do children classified as normal weight [13–17]. Excess body fat confounds the relationship between aerobic fitness, which is measured by maximal oxygen consumption (VO2 max) and age in both male and female children [15]. Thus, excess fat weight serves as a deterrent to exercise and body movement in general [18–22]. When overweight children are compared with normal-weight children during submaximal exercise, they exhibit higher cardiopulmonary values for a given work rate. It is not well understood whether this increase in cardiopulmonary stress per given work rate is a result of reduced physical activity patterns in obese children, the metabolic consequences of the excess weight, or the effect of the additional weight on the modality of exercise. Maffeis and others [14] reported that the cardiopulmonary responses were significantly lower in 17 nonoverweight children than in 23 overweight children during walking and running on a treadmill at different intensities. This study used the measure of percentage of ideal body weight (%IBW) to classify subjects as overweight or nonoverweight. The average %IBW was 138.3% in the overweight children and 95.5% in the nonoverweight children. The study concluded that walking and running demanded greater energy expenditure in overweight children when compared with non-overweight children, and more importantly, that overweight children expended more energy moving their bodies than did nonoverweight subjects. However, this finding differed from the results in a study by Rowland and others [23]. In this study, heart rate values were not significantly different between the nonoverweight and overweight subjects while walking at 3.2 mph, 8% grade, and approximately 97% of VO2 max. Because the intensity of exercise was so close to maximal levels, these results should be interpreted as such. Interestingly, Loftin and others reported that increased body mass was associated with lower maximal heart rate in youth [24]. Studies using cycle (non-weight bearing) as opposed to treadmill (weight bearing) ergometry have yielded conflicting results. Cooper et al. [25] examined the oxygen uptake response in a sample of 18 overweight children ranging in age from 9 to 17 years during cycle ergometry. The authors reported normal 02 kinetic responses when moving from rest to exercise. However, the overweight children had significantly prolonged response kinetics when ventilation (VE) and carbon dioxide output (VCO2) were observed. The authors concluded that overweight children might have normal fitness levels for their individual stages of development. Their findings should be interpreted cautiously, however, because responses may be different during cycle ergometry, as opposed to treadmill, when the excess body weight of the overweight subject is supported. This is evident when the results of Maffeis and colleagues are considered [26]. They reported that VO2 max expressed in absolute values in overweight children was significantly greater than in non-overweight children during treadmill testing, but not significantly different during cycle ergometry. However, when VO2 max was expressed relative to fat-free mass, no differences were observed between overweight and nonoverweight subjects during either walking or cycling protocols [14]. The authors suggested that overweight children experienced no limitation in maximal aerobic power during weight-bearing or non-weight-bearing exercise. However, submaximal exercise results were not discussed [21]. Zanconato et al. [27] reported that VO2 max expressed in milliliters per kilogram per minute was significantly greater in nonoverweight than in overweight children. However, in absolute terms, VO2 max L/min was not significantly different between the two groups. In the same study, the performance run time and maximal work rate were also significantly lower in the overweight compared with the nonoverweight. Loftin and colleagues previously reported that when VO2 max values are adjusted for total body weight in children a significant bias results [28]. Thus, reporting
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VO2 max in absolute values or per kilogram of lean body weight reduces this bias. Allometric scaling techniques may also be applied to reduce weight bias. As a result of this bias, and because more research is needed on the obese child’s response to aerobic exercise, pediatric health care professionals should use caution when interpreting exercise testing results.
ENERGY COST
OF
LOCOMOTION
The energy cost of locomotion can be described as the metabolic cost or actual energy expenditure needed to complete a task. As a result of their excess weight, obese children may have a greater metabolic cost or energy expenditure for executing the same physical activity than does a normalweight child. This greater cost of locomotion may explain why obese children may not perform as well as nonobese children during aerobic tasks [8]. In a study by Volpe and Bar-Or [29], the energy cost of walking was examined in obese and lean adolescent boys who were matched for total body mass. At the slow and moderate speeds, the obese and lean boys displayed similar energy cost. At the fastest speed, however, the obese adolescents displayed an energy cost that was 12% higher than the lean adolescents. Moreover, total body mass rather than adiposity explained a higher percentage of the variance in energy cost during all the walking speeds. Wasteful movements, particularly observed in the gait patterns of obese children, also increase the energy cost of locomotion [8]. Hills and Parker [30] observed the gait patterns of normal weight and obese prepubertal children while walking at different velocities on a level surface. Even when the velocity was set at a comfortable pace, the obese children displayed a significantly lower cadence of steps per minute compared with the normal weight children. During the faster, and especially slower, speeds, obese children had even more difficulty walking. McGraw et al. [31] examined differences in gait patterns and postural stability in obese and nonobese prepubertal boys. Similar to the study by Hills and Parker [30], the obese boys displayed a significantly lower cadence, slower gait cycle, and reduced time in the swing phase, compared with the nonobese boys. With regard to postural stability, greater sway areas were observed, especially in the medial/lateral direction, in the obese boys. The authors concluded that this greater sway area was a result of the excess weight rather than postural instability [31]. Although these studies demonstrate that abnormal gait patterns may increase energy cost during exercise in obese children, it is unknown whether weight loss will reverse this observation.
MUSCLE STRENGTH Strength training is defined as the use of a series of progressive resistance exercises to improve an individual’s ability to exert muscular force against a resistance [32]. Investigators suggest that if properly administered, resistance-training programs may not only be safe but may also help reduce the risk of injury during other physical activities in children [3,32–35]. In addition, a safe resistancetraining program will develop and prepare the muscles for sport and competition [32,36]. However, few studies have examined the obese child’s response to strength training. Sothern and colleagues have shown that the inclusion of regular resistance training in a program to prevent and treat pediatric obesity in preadolescent children is not only feasible but also safe and may contribute to increased retention at 1 year [33,34]. In another report, a meta-analysis examined 30 childhood obesity treatment studies that included an exercise intervention [37]. Significant improvements in body composition were associated with programs including high-repetition strength training in conjunction with moderate intensity aerobic exercise. Thus, the combination of high-repetition resistance training, moderate aerobic exercise, and behavioral modification may be most efficacious for reducing body fat variables in overweight children. However, pediatric health care providers should be careful when recommending strength training to obese children. The American Academy of Pediatrics separates the terms resistance and strength training from the terms weight lifting, power lifting, and body building [4,35] and supports properly supervised strength/resistance training programs as safe methods for strength development in preadolescent children. The developing
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TABLE 6.1 Guidelines for Resistance Training 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13.
Check for physical and medical contraindication. Ensure experienced supervision, preferably by an adult, when using free weights or training machines. Ascertain proper technique. Warm up with calisthenics and stretches. Begin a program with exercise that uses body weight as resistance before progressing to free weights or weight training machines. Individualize training loads whether using free weights or machines. Train all major muscle groups and both flexors and extensors. Exercise the muscles through their entire range of motion. Alternate days of training with rest days, limiting participation to no more than three times a week. When using free weights or machines, progress gradually from light loads, high repetitions (>15), and few sets (two to three) to heavier loads, fewer repetitions (six to eight), and three to four sets. Cool down after training, using stretch exercises for major joints and muscle groups. When selecting equipment, check for durability, stability, sturdiness, and safety. Consider sharp or persistent pain as a warning, and seek medical advice.
Reprinted with permission from Bar-Or, O. and Rowland, T. Pediatric Exercise Medicine: From Physiologic Principles to Health Care Application. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics, 2004.
musculoskeletal system of the preadolescent child must be considered when designing resistancetraining programs. The intensity and duration of an individual resistance exercise bout (set) must be appropriate to the level of maturity of the growing bones and muscles [33]. Pediatric obesity is associated with advanced bone age and increased bone and muscle density [10]. This may provide an advantage to obese children when participating in strength training, especially as research indicates that the enhancement of strength associated with resistance training is not accompanied by increased muscle size in prepubertal children [38]. Several agencies have published resistive training guidelines for preadolescent children [3,4,34,35,39,40]. Trained professionals should consult these guidelines before designing a program specific to their patients’ or students’ needs. Table 6.1 provides general guidelines for resistance training in children and adolescents [8]. Strength training may provide additional benefits and advantages to obese children. Most strength exercises are performed while the body weight is supported. In especially severely overweight youth, this may enhance performance because although the excess fat weight is supported, the accompanying increased muscle and bone weight will enable more force to be generated. More research is needed; however, it appears that strength/resistance training may be used safely to enhance the efforts to prevent and reverse childhood obesity in clinic-based interventions.
MOTOR PERFORMANCE Fundamental motor skills (FMS) are critical to participation in most physical activities [41]. Okely and others [41] examined the association between FMS proficiency and body composition among children and adolescents. The following six FMS measurements were assessed: run, vertical jump, catch, overhand throw, forehand strike, and kick. Body composition was assessed by waist circumference and body mass index. An inverse linear association was observed between the overweight youth’s ability to perform FMS and degree of overweight. Moreover, the overweight youth were twice as likely as the nonoverweight ones to be in the lowest FMS quintile [41]. Similar results were also observed when Graf and colleagues [42] examined the correlation between body mass index and gross motor development in first-grade children (mean age 6.7 years). In the overweight/obese children, body mass index was inversely correlated with gross motor development and endurance
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performance. Thus, excess fat weight may negatively affect the fundamental motor skill performance of some children. Pediatric health care professionals should provide opportunities for obese children to participate in activities that both consider and improve impaired fundamental motor skills.
RATING
OF
PERCEIVED EXERTION
The rating of perceived exertion (RPE) scale designed by Borg [43] is a method of determining the intensity of subjective effort. Using a number scale from 6 to 20, individuals can rate their feeling of exertion. For instance, 6 is no exertion at all, whereas 20 is maximal exertion. Marinov et al. [44] examined ventilatory efficiency and the rate of perceived exertion in obese and nonobese children during standardized exercise testing. Sixty children, 30 obese and 30 nonobese, ages 6 to 17 years, matched by age, sex, and height, participated in a modified Balke treadmill test. During standardized work rates, the obese children noted RPEs significantly higher than the nonobese children. This higher RPE may be attributed to a higher aerobic cost of exercise, which was also displayed [44]. Bar-Or and colleagues have also observed similar results in work not yet published [Bar-Or, unpublished]. Ward and Bar-Or examined the use of the Borg scale in exercise prescription for obese children. The authors [45] found that obese children were able to reproduce exercise intensities when prescribed to them as numbers on the RPE scale. They did, however, use a narrower range of prescribed intensities than those available to them. On the cycle, the children overestimated their choice of low intensities and underestimated their choice of high intensities. During the walking/running exercises, the children overestimated their choice of all the prescribed intensities [47]. These studies indicate that obese children may perceive that certain exercises are difficult and perhaps too challenging. This may, in turn, inhibit their motivation to increase physical activity. However, more research is needed to support these observations.
IMPLICATIONS OF EXERCISE PRESCRIPTION Previous reports show that encouraging overweight children to adhere to exercise programs is difficult because of the greater cardiopulmonary and biomechanical strain associated primarily with weight-bearing activity [14,15,22,46]. The discomfort associated with transporting an overweight body may result in pain in the lower extremities, breathing difficulty, and premature fatigue, especially in severe conditions of obesity [21,22]. In addition, there are emerging data to indicate that childhood obesity impairs fundamental motor skills. This, combined with a higher-energy cost of locomotion, alters the obese child’s perception of exercise difficulty. Therefore, obese children may experience negative consequences to participation in activities considered appropriate for normal-weight children. Although walking looks relatively easy, it is an extremely complex biomechanical process [47]. The excess weight that overweight children carry may affect their gait pattern and posture. Therefore, the child’s gait pattern and posture should also be considered because overweight children experience more gait and postural problems compared with normal-weight children [47]. Exercises to improve their gait pattern, posture, and balance should be considered when prescribing a physical activity program to overweight children [30].
ACTIVITIES SUITABLE
FOR THE
OBESE CHILD
Most, but not all, physical activities if properly dosed and of appropriate intensity may be performed safely and successfully by obese children. However, several factors inhibit obese children during physical activity, including awkwardness around normal-weight peers and limited speed and agility resulting from carrying excess fat weight. Therefore, it is important to consider the following factors when prescribing exercise to obese children. First, obese children are often inhibited when expected to exercise together with normal-weight peers. In contrast, when their peers are all (or mostly) obese, overweight children play and exercise with little or no inhibition. In settings in which exercise
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apparel is revealing, such as swimming activities, this is especially evident. Second, obese children are taller than their peers (especially during pre-, early-, and midpubertal years), and although this gives them some advantage in sports where height and arm span are important (e.g., basketball, volleyball, shot put, discus, defensive or offensive line in football), their relative slowness and clumsiness limit their ability to excel in these competitive settings. However, in many cases they can still be useful to their team. Third, another type of activity in which the obese child can perform well is strength training. This may be a result of advanced muscle development and bone age. However, many strength exercises require the body to assume positions in which overall body weight is supported. In this case, obese children’s performance will be equal, if not superior, to normal-weight peers. Finally, obese children have two advantages for water-based activities: they are more buoyant and better thermally insulated. The buoyancy gives them a definite advantage in moving or floating in water, which may boost their success in swimming and water games — a major contradistinction to land-based activities. In addition, the better subcutaneous insulation is a definite advantage when the water is cool. In this environment, lean children will lose heat (and feel the cold) much faster than those with more fat [48]. Several steps can be followed to motivate the obese child to be physically active. Chapter 14 examines various motivational theories and models; however, there are specific physical factors that can be addressed as well. Both parents and health professionals can help make physical activity enjoyable for the obese child. They can help identify local facilities for physical activity, including parks, swimming pools, and community walking groups. Health professionals should teach the children how to listen to their bodies and exercise at their own pace [49]. Pacing skills may not be inherent. Therefore, instruction should include methods to help children identify moderate versus vigorous activity and the resulting heat rate and breathing responses (see Chapter 20). Weight-bearing activities should be limited at the start of a weight-loss program for obese children [8,50]. Deforche et al. [51] reported that obese youth have poorer performances during weight-bearing tasks compared with the nonobese children [51]. Swimming is an ideal, non-weight bearing activity for obese children [8]. Swimming is ideal for obese children not only because of their higher buoyancy and thermal comfort but also because their bodies are completely submerged, therefore avoiding exposure to their nonobese peers.
ACTIVITIES LESS SUITABLE
FOR THE
OBESE CHILD
Physical activities that require repeated attempts to lift the entire body weight are not suitable for obese children. Activities in which the obese are unlikely to do well (and therefore should not be part of the initial general prescription) are those that require speed, quickness, and lifting of their own weight. For example, obese children will do poorly in sprinting and jumping. Their poor ability to lift their own body presents a major handicap in routines such as pull-ups and in dips on the parallel bars. Activities such as stair climbing, jogging, and running should also be given a low priority. The lower joints are under a considerable load during these activities. This can pose a threat to the child’s joints, posture, and gait pattern [47]. In addition, because obese children will expend more energy performing physical activities of the same intensity as normal-weight children, they should not be prescribed running activities in which they must compete with normal-weight youth [8,22].
SUMMARY Exercise alone is not typically accepted as a tool for promoting the achievement of a healthy weight in youth. A large quantity of physical activity is required to reduce body fat [8]. For example, to metabolize just 1 pound of fat, which is equivalent to 3500 calories of energy expenditure, a healthyweight adult male or an obese child with equivalent body mass must run approximately 30 miles. But the benefits of exercise to the management of pediatric obesity are cumulative. Over time, consistent physical activity will result in a multitude of metabolic and physiologic benefits [36,52].
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TABLE 6.2 Components of an Optimal Enhanced Activity Program for Juvenile Obesity Use large muscle groups (to achieve high-energy expenditure). Move the whole body over distance (e.g., walking, skating, dancing, swimming). Emphasize duration; deemphasize intensity. Aim at energy equivalent of 10–15% total daily expenditure (e.g., 200–300 kcal) per session. Include resistance training (particularly if program includes low-energy dieting). Gradually increase frequency and volume (strive for daily activity, 30–45 min per day). Consider the child’s preference for activities. Emphasize water-based sports and games. Consider lifestyle changes, not merely regimented activities. Let parents contract with the child to reduce sedentary activities (e.g., television). Build in token remuneration. Include other obese children in group activities (this reduces inhibition). Remember, key to compliance is fun, fun, fun! Reprinted with permission from Bar-Or, O. and Rowland, T. Pediatric Exercise Medicine: From Physiologic Principles to Health Care Application. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics, 2004.
In particular, frequent vigorous physical activity periods are shown to be associated with decreased abdominal fat in male adolescents [53]. And the adult research literature indicates that regular exercise training (> 6 months) improves fat oxidation (increased oxidative enzymes), glucose metabolism (increased number of glucose transporters and glucose into triglycerides), mitochondrial function, sympathetic nervous system activity (improved catecholamine stimulation response), and lipoprotein lipase activity, which may, indirectly, positively affect metabolic profiles [36,54–56]. Together, these changes and resulting benefits will not only enhance dietary efforts during weight loss but also promote long-term weight maintenance. Unfortunately, the positive effects of exercise training will only be realized if the obese child complies with the prescribed physical activities. Therefore, it is imperative that careful consideration be given to selecting the most appropriate intensity, frequency, duration, and modality of exercise for each obese child. Table 6.2 provides physical activity recommendations for obese children that may be safely and effectively used in the pediatric clinical setting.
REFERENCES 1. Kiess, W., A. Galler, A. Reich, G. Muller, T. Kapellen, J. Deutscher et al. Clinical aspects of obesity in childhood and adolescence. Obes Rev. 2:29–36, 2001. 2. Cabana, M. Barriers to guideline adherence. Am J Manag Care. 4:S741–S744, 1998. 3. Pollock, M., Gaesser, G., Butcher, J., Despres, J., Dishman, R., Franklin, B. et al. American College of Sports Medicine Position Stand. The recommended quantity and quality of exercise for developing and maintaining cardiorespiratory and muscular fitness, and flexibility in healthy adults, Med Sci Sports Exerc. 30:975–991, 1998. 4. American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Sports Medicine: Strength training, weight and power lifting, and body building by children and adolescents. Pediatrics. 86:801–803, 1990. 5. Krebs, N. F. and M. S. Jacobson. American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Nutrition. Prevention of pediatric overweight and obesity. Pediatrics. 112:424–430, 2003. 6. Barlow, S. E. and W. H. Dietz. Management of child and adolescent obesity: summary and recommendations based on reports from pediatricians, pediatric nurse practitioners, and registered dietitians. Pediatrics. 110:236–238, 2002. 7. Washington, R. L., D. T. Bernhardt, J. Gomez, M. D. Johnson, T. J. Martin, T. W. Rowland et al. Organized sports for children and preadolescents. Pediatrics. 107:1459–1462, 2001.
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Handbook of Pediatric Obesity: Clinical Management 8. Bar-Or, O. and T. W. Rowland. Pediatric Exercise Medicine: From Physiologic Principles to Health Care Application. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics, 2004. 9. De Simone, M., G. Farello, M. Palumbo, T. Gentile, M. Ciuffreda, P. Olioso et al. Growth charts, growth velocity and bone development in childhood obesity. Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord. 19:851–857, 1995. 10. Austin, H., J. M. Austin, Jr., E. E. Partridge, K. D. Hatch, and H. M. Shingleton. Endometrial cancer, obesity, and body fat distribution. Cancer Res. 51:568–572, 1991. 11. Frisch, R. E. and R. Revelle. Height and weight at menarche and a hypothesis of menarche. Arch Dis Child. 46:695–701, 1971. 12. Nemet, D., P. Wang, T. Funahashi, Y. Matsuzawa, S. Tanaka, L. Engelman, and D. M. Cooper. Adipocytokines, body composition, and fitness in children. Pediatr Res. 53:148–152, 2003. 13. French, S. A., M. Story, and C. L. Perry. Self-esteem and obesity in children and adolescents: a literature review. Obes Res. 3:479–490, 1995. 14. Maffeis, C., Y. Schutz, F. Schena, M. Zaffanello, and L. Pinelli. Energy expenditure during walking and running in obese and nonobese prepubertal children. J Pediatr. 123:193–199, 1993. 15. Sothern, M. S., J. Loftin, R. M. Suskind, J. N. Udall, and U. Blecker. Physiologic function and childhood obesity. Int J Pediatr. 14:135–139, 1999. 16. Schwimmer, J. B., T. M. Burwinkle, and J. W. Varni. Health-related quality of life of severely obese children and adolescents. JAMA. 289:1813–1819, 2003. 17. Latner, J. D. and A. J. Stunkard. Getting worse: the stigmatization of obese children. Obes Res. 11:452–456, 2003. 18. Bray, G. The role of exercise in obesity: a personal view. In: Wahlwqvist, M., Ed. Exercise and Obesity. London: Smith-Gordon, 1994, pp. 7–9. 19. Davis, M. A., W. H. Ettinger, and J. M. Neuhaus. Obesity and osteoarthritis of the knee: evidence from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES I). Semin Arthritis Rheum. 20:34–41, 1990. 20. Hills, A. Locomotor characteristics of obese children. In: Wahlwqvist, M., Ed. Exercise and Obesity. London: Smith-Gordon, 1994, pp. 141–150. 21. McGoey, B. V., M. Deitel, R. J. Saplys, and M. E. Kliman. Effect of weight loss on musculoskeletal pain in the morbidly obese. J Bone Joint Surg Br. 72:322–323, 1990. 22. Sothern, M. S., S. Hunter, R. M. Suskind, R. Brown, J. N. Udall, and U. Blecker. Motivating the obese child to move: the role of structured exercise in pediatric weight management. South Med J. 92:577–584, 1999. 23. Rowland, T. W., M. R. Varzeas, and C. A. Walsh. Aerobic responses to walking training in sedentary adolescents. J Adolesc Health. 12:30–34, 1991. 24. Loftin, M., M. Sothern, C. VanVrancken, A. O’Hanlon, and J. Udall. Effect of obesity status on heart rate peak in female youth. Clin Pediatr (Phila). 42:505–510, 2003. 25. Cooper, D. M., J. Poage, T. J. Barstow, and C. Springer. Are obese children truly unfit? Minimizing the confounding effect of body size on the exercise response. J Pediatr. 116:223–230., 1990. 26. Maffeis, C., F. Schena, M. Zaffanello, L. Zoccante, Y. Schutz, and L. Pinelli. Maximal aerobic power during running and cycling in obese and non-obese children. Acta Paediatr. 83:113–116., 1994. 27. Zanconato, S., E. Baraldi, P. Santuz, F. Rigon, L. Vido, L. Da Dalt, and F. Zacchello. Gas exchange during exercise in obese children. Eur J Pediatr. 148:614–617, 1989. 28. Loftin, M., M. Sothern, L. Trosclair, A. O’Hanlon, J. Miller, and J. Udall. Scaling VO(2) peak in obese and non-obese girls. Obes Res. 9:290–296, 2001. 29. Volpe, A. and Bar-Or, O. Energy cost of walking in boys who differ in adiposity but are matched for body mass. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 35:669–674, 2003. 30. Hills, A. P. and A. W. Parker. Locomotor characteristics of obese children. Child Care Health Dev. 18:29–34, 1992. 31. McGraw, B., B. A. McClenaghan, H. G. Williams, J. Dickerson, and D. S. Ward. Gait and postural stability in obese and nonobese prepubertal boys. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 81:484–489, 2000. 32. Metcalf, J. A. and S. O. Roberts. Strength training and the immature athlete: an overview. Pediatr Nurs. 19:325–332., 1993. 33. Sothern, M. S., J. M. Loftin, J. N. Udall, R. M. Suskind, T. L. Ewing, S. C. Tang, and U. Blecker. Inclusion of resistance exercise in a multidisciplinary outpatient treatment program for preadolescent obese children. South Med J. 92:585–592., 1999.
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34. Sothern, M. S., J. M. Loftin, J. N. Udall, R. M. Suskind, T. L. Ewing, S. C. Tang, and U. Blecker. Safety, feasibility, and efficacy of a resistance training program in preadolescent obese children. Am J Med Sci. 319:370–375, 2000. 35. Bernhardt, D. T., J. Gomez, M. D. Johnson, T. J. Martin, T. W. Rowland, E. Small et al. Strength training by children and adolescents. Pediatrics. 107:1470–1472, 2001. 36. Sothern, M. S., M. Loftin, R. M. Suskind, J. N. Udall, and U. Blecker. The health benefits of physical activity in children and adolescents: implications for chronic disease prevention. Eur J Pediatr. 158:271–274, 1999. 37. LeMura, L. M. and M. T. Maziekas. Factors that alter body fat, body mass, and fat-free mass in pediatric obesity. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 34:487–496, 2002. 38. Blimkie, C. J. Resistance training during preadolescence. Issues and controversies. Sports Med. 15:389–407, 1993. 39. Hass, C. J., M. S. Feigenbaum, and B. A. Franklin. Prescription of resistance training for healthy populations. Sports Med. 31:953–964, 2001. 40. Pescatello, L. S., B. A. Franklin, R. Fagard, W. B. Farquhar, G. A. Kelley, and C. A. Ray. American College of Sports Medicine position stand. Exercise and hypertension. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 36:533–553, 2004. 41. Okely, A. D., M. L. Booth, and T. Chey. Relationships between body composition and fundamental movement skills among children and adolescents. Res Q Exerc Sport. 75:238–247, 2004. 42. Graf, C., B. Koch, E. Kretschmann-Kandel, G. Falkowski, H. Christ, S. Coburger et al. Correlation between BMI, leisure habits and motor abilities in childhood (CHILT-project). Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord. 28:22–26, 2004. 43. Borg, G. and H. Linderholm. Exercise performance and perceived exertion in patients with coronary insufficiency, arterial hypertension and vasoregulatory asthenia. Acta Med Scand. 187:17–26, 1970. 44. Marinov, B., S. Kostianev, and T. Turnovska. Ventilatory efficiency and rate of perceived exertion in obese and non-obese children performing standardized exercise. Clin Physiol Funct Imaging. 22:254–260, 2002. 45. Ward, D. S. and O. Bar-Or. Use of the Borg scale in exercise prescription for overweight youth. Can J Sport Sci. 15:120–125, 1990. 46. Huttunen, N. P., M. Knip, and T. Paavilainen. Physical activity and fitness in obese children. Int J Obes. 10:519–525, 1986. 47. Hills, A. P., E. M. Hennig, N. M. Byrne, and J. R. Steele. The biomechanics of adiposity — structural and functional limitations of obesity and implications for movement. Obes Rev. 3:35–43, 2002. 48. Sloan, R. E. and W. R. Keatinge. Cooling rates of young people swimming in cold water. J Appl Physiol. 35:371–375, 1973. 49. Hills, A. P. and N. M. Byrne. Physical activity in the management of obesity. Clin Dermatol. 22:315–318, 2004. 50. Sothern, M. S. Exercise as a modality in the treatment of childhood obesity. Pediatr Clin North Am. 48:995–1015, 2001. 51. Deforche, B., J. Lefevre, I. De Bourdeaudhuij, A. P. Hills, W. Duquet, and J. Bouckaert. Physical fitness and physical activity in obese and nonobese Flemish youth. Obes Res. 11:434–441, 2003. 52. Gutin, B., M. Litaker, S. Islam, T. Manos, C. Smith, and F. Treiber. Body-composition measurement in 9-11-y-old children by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry, skinfold-thickness measurements, and bioimpedance analysis. Am J Clin Nutr. 63:287–292, 1996. 53. Dionne, I., N. Almeras, C. Bouchard et al. The association between vigorous physical activities and fat deposition in male adolescents. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 32:392–395, 2000. 54. Tonkonogi, M., A. Krook, B. Walsh, and K. Sahlin. Endurance training increases stimulation of uncoupling of skeletal muscle mitochondria in humans by non-esterified fatty acids: an uncouplingprotein-mediated effect? Biochem J. 351(Pt 3):805–810, 2000. 55. Tonkonogi, M., B. Walsh, M. Svensson, and K. Sahlin. Mitochondrial function and antioxidative defence in human muscle: effects of endurance training and oxidative stress. J Physiol. 528(Pt 2):379–388, 2000. 56. Horowitz, J. F., T. C. Leone, W. Feng, D. P. Kelly, and S. Klein. Effect of endurance training on lipid metabolism in women: a potential role for PPARalpha in the metabolic response to training. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab. 279:E348–E355, 2000.
Section 4 Clinical Evaluation
Evaluation: 7 Clinical Diagnosis, Medical Testing, and Follow-up Nancy F. Krebs and Melinda S. Sothern CONTENTS Prevalence.........................................................................................................................................80 Causes/Risk Factors .........................................................................................................................80 Comorbidities ...................................................................................................................................81 Treatment Approaches .....................................................................................................................81 Diagnosis ..........................................................................................................................................82 Medical History ......................................................................................................................82 Family History........................................................................................................................83 Social History .........................................................................................................................83 Review of Systems .................................................................................................................84 Primary Risk Factors..............................................................................................................84 Physical Exam ........................................................................................................................84 Body Mass Index....................................................................................................................85 Background.................................................................................................................85 Calculating Obesity Risk and Status with BMI Percentiles......................................85 Diagnosis ....................................................................................................................85 Anthropometrics to Assess Fat Distribution ..........................................................................85 Skinfolds .....................................................................................................................85 Waist Circumference ..................................................................................................85 Direct Measurements of Body Composition .........................................................................86 Laboratory Testing — Basic Panels.......................................................................................86 Measurements of Energy Expenditure...................................................................................86 Referrals ...........................................................................................................................................86 Genetics ..................................................................................................................................86 Endocrinology.........................................................................................................................86 Thyroid .......................................................................................................................88 Pancreas ......................................................................................................................88 Cardiology ..............................................................................................................................88 Pulmonary...............................................................................................................................88 Orthopedics and Physical Therapy ........................................................................................89 Psychology..............................................................................................................................89 Social Services........................................................................................................................89 Nutrition..................................................................................................................................89 Exercise...................................................................................................................................89
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Education..........................................................................................................................................89 Follow-Up.........................................................................................................................................90 At Risk for Obesity ................................................................................................................90 Overweight .............................................................................................................................91 Severe Overweight..................................................................................................................91 Summary ..........................................................................................................................................91 References ........................................................................................................................................92
PREVALENCE The rapid rise in the prevalence of childhood overweight and obesity is occurring in both industrialized and developing countries all over the world. Pediatricians and other pediatric health care providers will play an increasingly important role in the early identification and prevention of childhood obesity and its associated comorbid conditions [1,2]. Because obesity is usually established at a young age, the pediatric primary care office is critical to national efforts to reverse the pediatric obesity epidemic [3]. According to the 1999–2000 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, the prevalence of childhood obesity (at or above the 95th percentile for body mass index [BMI] on standard reference growth charts) in the United States has grown to 15.3% of 6 to 11 year olds and 15.5% of 12 to 19 year olds [2,4]. Obesity prevalence has been found to be even higher among minority and economically disadvantaged populations [2,4,5].
CAUSES/RISK FACTORS Lower levels of daily physical activity by children in the United States have lead to a greater number of health problems in children than in previous generations. Sedentary lifestyles increase the risk of childhood medical conditions such as obesity, hypertension, hyperinsulinemia, hypercholesterolemia, and dyslipidemia [2,6]. Studies show that parent inactivity strongly predicts child inactivity [7,8]. A recent study examined the self-reported physical activity and dietary intake patterns of parents and changes in weight status over 2 years in offspring [9]. Girls of parents with high dietary intake and low physical activity (obesogenic) had significantly greater increases in weight status. Thus, in addition to family history of obesity, the environment of the home may equally contribute to the risk for developing obesity in childhood. However, there are also strong arguments for the effect of the genetic profile and the early nutritional environment on the risk for developing obesity during childhood [10–15]. Jackson and colleagues provide a strong argument for nutrition-induced changes in the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis in the mother and the fetus [10]. It is suggested that the local availability of nutrients during pregnancy, especially in relation to protein intake, may negatively affect future metabolic health. Adjustments may occur to protect brain tissue preferentially over visceral and somatic growth, resulting in an altered metabolic profile [10]. Thus, nutrition during pregnancy may have strong implications for future obesity and related chronic disease. Infancy is also considered a critical period for obesity development. A high protein intake at the age of 2 years was shown to promote increased fatness at 8 years of age, suggesting that a high-protein diet early in life could promote an increased risk of obesity later in childhood, but findings in this area are limited and have not been consistent [16]. Moreover, research generally supports that children who were breastfed have a lower risk of obesity than those who were formulafed [17–20]. In addition, those infants who breastfed for longer durations showed an even lower risk of childhood obesity [21]. Differences in feeding between breastfed and formula fed infants may also have a critical influence on infant weight gain. Therefore, low birth weight and breastfeeding history should be considered factors in obesity development in young children (Table 7.1). In addition, children with such risk factors may be predisposed genetically and behaviorally to the early manifestation of subtle, nonsymptomatic metabolic abnormalities that lead to childhood obesity and related chronic disease [22–28]. Therefore, strategies that positively alter the nutrition
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TABLE 7.1 Risk Factors for Pediatric Obesity Socioeconomic status Ethnicity Parental obesity — under 6 years of age Body mass index — over 6 years of age Critical development periods Birth (low/high birth weight) 5–6 years of age (adiposity rebound) Puberty (12–15 years of age) Infant formula feeding Poor nutrition, food preferences Excessive sedentary behaviors
and physical activity behaviors and environment of the family may reduce the risk of obesity in young children, especially in those with one or more risk factors. A recent publication of the American Academy of Pediatrics offers pediatric obesity prevention guidelines for medical professionals, which include increased monitoring of at-risk children and parent education [2]. Pediatric health care providers should recognize that environmental factors may greatly affect physical activity patterns. Unsafe neighborhoods and lack of adult supervision after school may increase time spent in sedentary behavior such as watching television and playing DVDs or video or computer games [29].
COMORBIDITIES Pediatric obesity is associated with many significant health problems and is strongly linked to increased risks for adult obesity, related comorbid diseases, and shortened life expectancy [2,6]. Growing numbers of obese children exhibit early signs of diseases that were once found only in adult populations including type 2 diabetes mellitus, high blood pressure, and abnormal lipid profiles [3]. Obese children are at an increased risk for diseases that can affect the cardiovascular, pulmonary, endocrine, and gastrointestinal systems, as well as orthopedic conditions and psychological health problems [2,6]. Comorbidities affecting the cardiovascular system include hypercholesterolemia, hypertension, and dyslipidemia [2,6a,30]. Endocrine system comorbidities include hyperinsulinemia, insulin resistance, impaired glucose tolerance, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and menstrual irregularity [2]. Common pulmonary and gastrointestinal comorbidities include sleep apnea, asthma, obesity hypoventilation syndrome, and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis [2,29]. Common orthopedic comorbidities include slipped capital femoral epiphysis, Blount disease (tibia varia), and genu varum. Mental health problems may include depression and low self-esteem [2,6,29].
TREATMENT APPROACHES Several weight loss approaches can be considered when choosing a treatment plan for an overweight or obese patient. Because obesity is a multifactorial disease, treatment of the disease is approached from many angles including diet modification, increased physical activity, psychological intervention, pharmacotherapy, and surgery. Reduction of energy intake is a mainstay of treatment, but the ideal approach will vary with the skills and motivation of the family, the severity of the overweight status, and the age of the child. Caution should be used in prescribing “diets” for children, except under well-supervised conditions because of the risks associated with overly restrictive access to food. This has been associated (in young children) with decreased ability to self-regulate energy intake [31,32]. In adolescents, dieting was inversely associated with BMI [33]. Several dietary
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approaches can be considered including low fat, low carbohydrate, high protein, and low glycemic index. The Traffic Light Diet (see Appendix A3.3B), which applies principles of foods with high versus low caloric density, has been shown to be easy for children to understand and successfully follow [34]. Other popular treatments focus on psychological and family therapy, including behavioral modification [35]. Behavioral modification has been shown to increase the success of obesity treatment and includes such elements as goal setting, maintaining a food diary, reducing availability of high-calorie stimulus foods, positive reinforcement, and parental support [34]. Health providers should seek training in health behavior change techniques, parent limit-setting strategies and reinforcement skills, and family conflict awareness [36]. Dietary treatment should be accompanied by efforts to emphasize increased physical activity [34,35]. However, exercise alone is generally not sufficient to promote significant weight loss without diet modification [34]. Physical activity provides additional health benefits and is linked to successful maintenance of weight-loss. Reduction of sedentary activities such as television viewing, video games, and computer time may be especially effective targets for behavior change [6a,37,38]. Pharmacotherapy is sometimes a useful adjunct to diet, activity, and behavioral change strategies. Examples specific for obesity treatment include sibutramine and orlistat, but each has significant potential side effects, and efficacy data are limited. Bariatric surgery has been successfully performed on severely obese adolescents. Guidelines for patient and site selection have been published [39]. Criteria include a BMI of at least 40, accompanied by significant comorbidities such as obstructive sleep apnea, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and pseudotumor cerebri. This treatment is best undertaken in a center that has surgeons with experience with the procedure in adolescents, and at which a multidisciplinary team is available. The procedure appears to be safe in the short term, and weight loss is typically substantial, with improvement in comorbidities. There are currently few data on long-term outcomes and complications [34,35,40].
DIAGNOSIS Early diagnosis and treatment of obesity in children is crucial for the successful management of pediatric health [2,41,42]. Unfortunately, although childhood obesity has now reached epidemic levels, this disease is still under-recognized by the health care community [43]. In addition, underdiagnosis is generally more prevalent than misclassification of obesity [44]. Recently, O’Brien et al. [43] reported that pediatric health care providers diagnosed overweight in only one-half (53%) of overweight children examined for health supervision. Moreover, in children diagnosed as overweight by their physicians, comprehensive treatment programs were not generally prescribed [43]. One study has shown that although plotting BMI enhanced physician recognition of overweight when compared with plotting height and weight for age, survey data in the same report indicatedthat only a minority of pediatricians routinely use BMI [45]. In Chapter 4 of this volume, Gordon provides similar disappointing rates of diagnosis and referral in overweight children in primary care settings [46]. Kiess and colleagues provide a diagnostic algorithm for childhood obesity that primary care providers can use to determine the most appropriate management plan (Figure 7.1) [35].
MEDICAL HISTORY Pediatric obesity is a complex condition that is associated, as noted above, with a plethora of medical complications, syndromes, and disorders. An expert panel report [47] suggests that the initial diagnosis should begin with a thorough screening of the patient’s medical history. Conditions of primary concern are hypertension, endocrine disorders, orthopedic problems, type 2 diabetes mellitus (or insulin resistance), genetic syndromes, sleep disorders, pseudotumor cerebri, and gastrointestinal disorders. As part of this medical history, information on the child’s current eating and physical activity patterns should be obtained, with a particular focus on behaviors that can be targeted for change.
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Obese child
Family and personal history: Physical examination
Suspect syndromial obesity
No
Yes
Suspect endocrine disorder
Suspect genetic syndrome
No
Exogenous, simple primary obesity (most common)
Yes
Chromosome typing: Molecular biology
Suspect Cushing’s syndrome; Hypothyroidism; Growth hormone deficiency, etc.
Endocrine testing; Neurological imaging; Molecular biology
FIGURE 7.1 Diagnostic algorithm for childhood obesity. Reprinted with permission from Kiess, W., A. Reich, G. Muller, A. Galler, T. Kapellen, K. Raile et al. Obesity in childhood and adolescence: clinical diagnosis and management. J Pediatr Endocrinol Metabol. 14(Suppl 6):1431–1440, 2001.
An expert committee has [29] emphasized that both food type and patterns of eating should be assessed to discern origins of excess caloric intake. Likewise, the assessment of physical activity patterns and extent of sedentary behaviors provides information important to increasing energy expenditure [29]. A comprehensive medical history and physical examination form may be found in Appendix A1.6.
FAMILY HISTORY Critical to assessment of a child’s risk from overweight is the documentation of the family history of disease. The recommended conditions to evaluate when obtaining family history from the patient include overweight, dyslipidemia, hypertension, cardiovascular disease, gallbladder disease, eating disorders in parents, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and other endocrine abnormalities [47]. Emerging research indicates that the health status of the mother immediately before pregnancy, during pregnancy, and during breastfeeding may also be important [48]. Whitaker tracked the weight status of preschool children whose mothers were obese during pregnancy. These youth were twice as likely to be overweight as children whose mothers maintained a healthy weight during pregnancy (Figure 7.2) [49].
SOCIAL HISTORY The structure of the family, school and child care arrangements, living situation, parental employment, and history of abuse are examples of information to be obtained in the social history, which will inform the negotiations for health behavior changes.
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Percentage of newborns obese as preschoolers by maternal weight in the 1st trimester of pregnancy Mother normal weight (BMI 18.5 to 24.9) Mother obese (BMI >= 30) 30 24.1
Percentage
25
20.6
20
15.1
15 10
6.4
7.5
9
5 0 Age 2 years
Age 3 years
Age 4 years
FIGURE 7.2 Percentage of newborns obese as preschoolers by maternal weight in the first trimester of pregnancy. Reprinted with permission from Whitaker, R. C. Predicting preschooler obesity at birth: the role of maternal obesity in early pregnancy. Pediatrics. 114:e29–36, 2004.
REVIEW
OF
SYSTEMS
The review of systems should address symptoms of potential comorbidities of overweight. Examples include asking about the presence of headaches; visual changes; sleep problems such as snoring, restless sleep, inability to lie supine, and daytime somnolence; shortness of breath or wheezing; chest pain; abdominal pain; and joint and skeletal muscle complaints. A brief evaluation of the child’s psychological status is also useful.
PRIMARY RISK FACTORS The children who are at the highest risk for becoming obese are those who belong to economically disadvantaged minority populations (Table 7.1). As a result of having a low socioeconomic status, children may have less access to safe places for physical activity and/or less access to healthful food choices such as fruits and vegetables. Recent studies show a consistent rise in the prevalence of obesity among preschool children from low-income families [50]. These children often have low levels of cognitive stimulation, which is associated with a significant increase in the risk for early-onset obesity [51]. Other risk factors that have been linked to an increased risk include unhealthy family and parental dynamics, low or high birth weight, maternal diabetes and obesity, high prevalence of obesity in other family members, and overcontrolling parental behavior (Table 7.1) [2].
PHYSICAL EXAM As for all patients, a patient who is found to be overweight should have a physical examination, in this case with a focus on signs of comorbid conditions that may be present or on any underlying conditions that may contribute to excessive weight gains, such as hypothyroidism, reactive airways disease, tonsillar hypertrophy (contributing to airway obstruction), genu varum (flat feet) or other orthopedic conditions, and genetic or endocrine abnormalities [41]. A patient with insulin resistance may show signs of acanthosis nigricans (darkening of the skin). Hypothyroidism should be suspected with excessive weight gain and plateauing of linear growth; exam findings may include skin and hair changes, enlarged thyroid, and absent deep tendon reflexes. An abdominal exam should assess liver size and tenderness. Postural and gait abnormalities may indicate the presence of orthopedic conditions such as genu varum. Tanner stage should be evaluated and assessed in relation to the child’s age. Rare genetic and endocrine abnormalities may manifest themselves through dysmorphic features including abnormal genitalia, developmental delay, poor linear growth, hirsuitism,
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and striae [41]. Blood pressure measurements should also be obtained using an appropriately sized blood pressure cuff.
BODY MASS INDEX Background The World Health Organization, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and many national organizations recommend the use of BMI to identify overweight and obesity in youth [2,52,53]. BMI is a convenient measurement for screening for overweight in children. Standard BMI classifications define a BMI between the 85th and 95th percentiles for age and sex as “at risk for overweight,” and a BMI greater than the 95th percentile for age as “overweight” (Appendix A1.10). BMI is an accepted screening tool for use by pediatric health care providers as a result of its use of easily accessible data (weight and height) and moderately strong correlation with laboratory measurements of body fatness [2,3,54]. Calculating Obesity Risk and Status with BMI Percentiles Pediatric growth charts for the U.S. population now include BMI percentile grids for age and gender and can be used for longitudinal tracking of a patient’s BMI from ages 2 through 20 years, and to identify overweight (see Appendix A1.10) [29,53]. BMI is calculated by applying one of the following formulas: weight (kilograms)/height (meters)2 or [weight (pounds)/height (inches)2] × 703. Diagnosis Once BMI is calculated, the physician or health care provider can determine risk and status by plotting on Centers for Disease Control and Prevention growth charts (see Appendix A1.10). This should be done at least annually to facilitate the early recognition of overweight and to monitor weight increases relative to linear growth [2]. If a trend for excessive weight gain is established (e.g., crossing BMI percentile channels or an increase of three to four BMI units in 1 year), contributing factors should be explored and discussed with parents to prevent further progression of excessive weight gain or overweight status. Research, although limited, indicates that early treatment is associated with improved long-term success [29].
ANTHROPOMETRICS
TO
ASSESS FAT DISTRIBUTION
Skinfolds Subcutaneous fat represents approximately 50% of total body fat, which provides an accessible proxy for assessment of body fatness. The 80th and 95th percentiles of skinfold readings are accepted measures of overweight and obesity in children [6]. Caliper measurement of skinfold thickness requires training and should only be administered by experienced staff. Skinfolds can be measured at a variety of body sites and are used in formulas that predict percent body fat (Appendix A2.3) [6]. Waist Circumference An additional method of assessing body composition is the measurement of girth of various body sections. Waist circumference provides an indication of trunk or visceral obesity, which is highly correlated in adults with diabetes and heart disease risk. Similar data are not available for the pediatric population. A metal or fiberglass measuring tape with a metric scale is used to measure
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the circumference of the waist and hip. The waist circumference is also a useful indicator for determining reduction in fat weight after treatment (Appendix A2.1.3).
DIRECT MEASUREMENTS
OF
BODY COMPOSITION
Direct measurements of body fat content can be found using such tools as hydrodensitometry, bioimpedance, or dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry [35]. In Chapter 4 of this text, Gordon discusses the advantages and disadvantages of these various methods, and detailed protocols may be found in Appendix A2.3.
LABORATORY TESTING — BASIC PANELS Secondary assessments may include lipid profiles, total cholesterol, insulin, glucose tolerance, glucose, glycohemoglobin, thyroid function, cortisol, and liver enzymes [47]. If the child is diagnosed with a BMI greater than 95th percentile, additional testing may be warranted. Because pediatric overweight (BMI > 95th percentile for age and sex) is associated with many other disease risk factors, practitioners can further define risk by checking a fasting lipid profile (Appendix A2.2) [41]. Other potentially useful biochemical markers of comorbidities include liver profile, and fasting glucose and insulin. It should be recognized that there are not standardized guidelines for biochemical evaluation, especially because identification of biochemical abnormalities will often not change therapeutic interventions.
MEASUREMENTS
OF
ENERGY EXPENDITURE
In some cases, measurement of resting energy expenditure may be useful to help caloric intake goals. Resting energy expenditure can be measured through indirect calorimetry. However, it is difficult to obtain an accurate measure because it is affected by diet, exercise, body temperature, growth, and development [55]. In an outpatient setting, it is difficult to optimally control these factors, and thus measurements can at best be viewed as approximations. Therefore, routine assessment of resting energy expenditure is of limited value.
REFERRALS Overweight children with more severe medical problems such as obstructive sleep apnea, obesity hypoventilation syndrome, and orthopedic problems may benefit from more aggressive dietary strategies. If a referral is made to an overweight treatment center, it is important to identify a program that is staffed by medical professionals experienced in the management of these serious comorbidities. Massively overweight children without severe comorbidities, but with a history of weight loss failures, may also benefit from consultation with a pediatric obesity center. Ariza and colleagues [41] provide a detailed assessment and action plan for overweight children in the primary care setting (Figure 7.3).
GENETICS Genetic syndromes associated with pediatric obesity include Prader–Willi, Turner syndrome, or Laurence–Moon–Bardet–Biedle [41]. Findings such as developmental delay, short stature/delayed growth, dysmorphic features, abnormal or absent genitalia, and digital anomalies should raise suspicion of an underlying genetic etiology and consideration of definitive testing. If any of these conditions is suspected, referral to a geneticist or other relevant subspecialist is recommended [41].
ENDOCRINOLOGY There are several endocrine disorders related to pediatric obesity, including primarily hypothyroidism, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and polycystic ovary disease. Although less common, findings
Suspect: Hypothyroidism Check TSH, T4
Suspect: Prader Willi Turner Syndrome Lawrence-MoonBandet-Biedle
Refer to endocrinology
Suspect: Cushing’s Syndrome Check 24-hour urine cortisol
Hirsuitism Moon facies Acne Buffalo hump Striae
Check FPG if ≥ 126 mg/dl
FHx of type 2 diabetes mellitus Race/ethnicity Signs of insulin resistance (HTN, dyslipidemia, acanthasis, nigricans, POS)
Type 2 diabetes mellitus
If: BP ≥ 95th percentile for height and gender on 3 separate occasions
Hypertension
Refer to cardiology
If: LDL ≥ 110 mg/dl
Dyspnea on exertion Shortness of breath Check fasting lipid profile
Refer for sleep evaluation and/or ENT
Obstructive sleep apnea Disordered sleep breeathing
Respiratory disturbances
Dyslipidemia
Assess/screen for comorbidities
Assessment of At Risk and Overweight Children
Overweight BMI ≥ 95th percentile
Refer to orthopedics or PT
Spinal asymmetry Flat feet Genu varus/valgus Bowed legs
Muscular/skeletal abnormalities
FIGURE 7.3 Primary care assessment and action plan for overweight children. Reprinted with permission from Ariza, A. J., R. S. Greenberg, and R. Unger. Childhood overweight: management approaches in young children. Pediatr Ann. 33:33–38, 2004.
Refer to genetics
Poor linear growth
Family Patterns and Risk Assessment Family and child eating patterns and physical activity FHx overweight, coronary heart disease, hypertension, type 2 diabetes mellitus, hypercholesterolemia Recent weight increase or concerns
At Risk for Being Overweight BMI 85th to 94th percentile
Diet and physical activity counseling and management of family dynamics with frequent follow up
Endocrine abnormalities
Developmental delay Dysmorphic features Abnormal or absent genitalia Digital anomalies
Genetic syndromes
Assess/screen for definable causes for overweight
Return in 1 year for follow up
Non-overweight BMI 5th to 84th percentile
Nutritional Evaluation Height and weight measurements BMI calculation and interpretation
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indicative of Cushing syndrome, including moon facies, short stature, central obesity, and apparent reduced lean body mass should prompt referral to an endocrinologist. If this is the case, then a 24-hour urine cortisol should be ordered [41]. Thyroid Symptoms of hypothyroidism include constipation, cold intolerance, fatigue, and lethargy; signs may include poor linear growth, hypotension, bradycardia, anemia, and loss of deep tendon reflexes. If symptoms or signs of hypothyroidism are present, TSH and T4 levels should be checked, and if these levels are diagnostic of hypothyroidism, the child should be referred to a pediatric endocrinologist [41]. Pancreas Insulin resistance is common with excess central (or visceral) adiposity. Insulin resistance is associated with hyperinsulinemia, fatty liver, hypertension, and exercise intolerance. Hyperinsulinemia in children can be associated with normal fasting glucose for some time, but with persistence, there is progression to impaired glucose tolerance, and eventually to β-cell failure and elevated fasting glucose and type 2 diabetes. If insulin resistance or type 2 diabetes mellitus is suspected, fasting insulin and blood glucose levels may be obtained. Hyperglycemia is relatively insensitive until there is frank diabetes, but if fasting glucose levels are 126 mg/dL or more, the child should be referred to a pediatric endocrinologist for further examination [41]. The utility of fasting insulin levels is debated, but documentation of elevation is a finding that motivates some families to make changes, especially if there is a strong family history of type 2 diabetes [41]. An elevated fasting insulin is also part of the constellation of findings referred to as metabolic syndrome [56].
CARDIOLOGY During the medical examination, if the child’s blood pressure is in the 95th (or higher) percentile for height and gender on three separate occasions, then referral to a cardiologist is suggested [41]. Chest pain is another symptom that may require referral. Treatment of hyperlipidemia (LDL ≥ 110 mg/dl) or dyslipidemia (e.g., metabolic syndrome), including initial diet therapy, may also be available through preventive cardiology services, or through nutrition or endocrine subspecialists [41].
PULMONARY Pulmonary disorders associated with significant obesity that may require rapid weight loss are obstructive sleep apnea and obesity hypoventilation syndrome [57]. Symptoms indicative of sleep disturbances include snoring, restless sleep, inability to sleep supine, and daytime somnolence. Assessment ideally includes an electrocardiogram to rule out cardiomegaly, sinus dysrhythmias, and right-side heart failure, as well as a sleep study with polysomnography to monitor for hypoxia and cardiac function. Treatment may include supplemental oxygen or positive airway pressure, but at least modest weight loss will also be advantageous. Clinicians should seek guidance from pediatric pulmonologists and obesity treatment specialists [29]. One of the most common pulmonary disorders associated with pediatric obesity is asthma [58]. Asthma is a major cause of chronic pediatric illness and school absenteeism. Moreover, urban minority children with asthma are significantly more overweight than those without asthma [59]. Results of most studies in children do not support a direct causal link between asthma and overweight conditions during childhood [60]. Furthermore, there is insufficient evidence to indicate that asthma precedes overweight conditions in children. Because excess weight exacerbates asthma symptoms, especially during exercise, overweight children with asthma should be monitored closely by a pulmonary specialist.
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ORTHOPEDICS
AND
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PHYSICAL THERAPY
There are several serious orthopedic complications that result from significant obesity during childhood. These include slipped capital femoral epiphysis (manifested as hip or knee pain and limited hip range of motion) and Blount’s disease (tibia vara) [29]. Referral should be made to an orthopedic surgeon if radiography confirms either of these conditions [29]. Other related comorbidities include spinal asymmetry, flat feet, genu varus/valgus, Legg–Calve–Perthe disease, and degenerative arthritis. Referral may be made to a physical therapist for an initial evaluation and, in many cases, for therapeutic strategies.
PSYCHOLOGY Several psychological disorders are associated with pediatric obesity. Binge-eating disorder should be suspected if the patient reports feeling unable to control food consumption. Depression is commonly found in overweight children, especially in older youth with severe overweight conditions. Jonides and colleagues [61] suggest that the emotional stability of the child and the family will likely determine successful treatment outcomes. If the child displays sadness or reports insomnia, restlessness, or hopelessness, then referral to a psychologist is essential to confirm the diagnosis [29]. In Chapter 9 of this volume, Johnson and von Almen detail appropriate psychological assessment for overweight children.
SOCIAL SERVICES The negative effects of food restriction or verbal prompting to consume served food were recently highlighted by the American Academy of Pediatrics [2]. In extreme cases, in which parental behavior results in either food restriction and eating disorders or continued overconsumption and morbid, life-threatening obesity, it may be necessary to refer the patient’s family to social services. Likewise, if there is evidence of physical or sexual abuse related to the child’s overweight condition, social services should be consulted.
NUTRITION Adequate nutrition is vital to growth and development, and both insufficient and imbalanced food consumption can cause nutrient deficiencies, impaired cognitive development, and growth velocity delays [62]. Therefore, if the child’s weight condition warrants dietary intervention, referral should be made to a registered dietician. He or she will apply U.S. Department of Agriculture caloric and nutrient guidelines based on the child’s age, gender, and medical condition when prescribing a weight-loss plan. A priority for dietary counseling is parent nutrition education so that family-wide changes in food selection and preparation are encouraged [41] (Appendix A3).
EXERCISE Pediatric health care professionals should encourage families to engage in regular physical activity to help children achieve and maintain a healthy weight [64]. Local information concerning activity centers, YMCAs, Boys and Girls Clubs, parks, and other recreational areas should be provided to parents [41]. In older children with significant obesity, structured exercise guidelines are useful [64]. Referral to a trained and certified pediatric exercise physiologist will ensure age-appropriate physical activities for the patient.
EDUCATION It is now widely accepted that anticipatory guidance on healthy eating habits and physical activity should begin early and for all children (Table 7.2). Readiness for change is essential, and families resistant to lifestyle modification should be referred to a family therapist [34]. Family histories of
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TABLE 7.2 Guidelines for Treatment Intervention should begin early, with clinicians initiating treatment when children 3 or fewer years of age become overweight. Because the risk of persistent obesity increases with age, it is crucial for the primary care provider to begin treatment as soon as possible [29]. The physician should ensure that the family is ready for change. It is crucial from the outset that physicians, parents, and children have mutually agreeable goals [34]. If the family seems resistant to change, a referral to a therapist who can address the family’s readiness may be needed. The clinician should educate families about the long-term risks and medical complications of obesity. A family history of obesity related disorders will identify children at particular risk [29]. The clinician should involve the family and all caregivers in the treatment program. Doing so will create new family behaviors consistent with the child’s new eating and activity goals, which is important for the long-term success of the treatment [29]. Treatment programs should be focused on making permanent changes in physical activity and eating habits. Gradual, longterm changes have higher success rates than multiple, frequent changes [29].
TABLE 7.3 Recommended Steps for Monitoring Patients for Overweight and Obesity Identify patients who may be at risk by looking at such factors as family history, birth weight, or socioeconomic, ethnic, cultural, or environmental factors. Calculate and plot body mass index once a year for all children and adolescent patients to identify those who are obese, overweight, or at risk. Look for changes in body mass index to identify rates of excessive weight gain relative to linear growth. Monitor patients for risks of obesity-associated chronic diseases such as hypertension, hyperinsulinemia, impaired glucose tolerance, dyslipidemia, and symptoms of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome [2].
obesity and related disorders increase the child’s risk of developing comorbid diseases, and the medical consequences of such diseases should be addressed with the family [29]. Treatment success rates improve with participation by family members and care givers. Gradual, permanent changes to the diet and physical activity patterns of the child are more successful than transient, short-term changes (Table 7.2) [29,34]. The BMI measurements of patients should be evaluated each year, with increased attention paid by the physician to patterns of excessive weight gain relative to linear growth as well as to children identified as at greater risk for overweight and obesity (Table 7.3) [2]. Patients at risk of developing obesity-related comorbidities should be monitored closely for signs of these diseases. Pediatricians and health care providers should routinely encourage parents in the healthy dietary practices of breastfeeding, moderation, and appropriate portion sizes, regular fruit and vegetable consumption, limits on sweetened beverages, and other nutritious food choices (Table 7.4) [2]. Pediatricians should also educate parents and caregivers on their roles in establishing physical activity patterns [2]. Increased physical activity and setting limits on sedentary behaviors should also be promoted. The success of prevention efforts will be more favorable if both dietary and physical activity interventions are emphasized (Table 7.4).
FOLLOW-UP AT RISK
FOR
OBESITY
Children who are diagnosed with one or more primary risk factors or fall above the 85th percentile on the BMI percentiles may benefit from monitoring more frequently than annually (e.g., every
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TABLE 7.4 Preventive Strategies Mothers should be encouraged to breastfeed their babies. Parents and caregivers should be educated in healthy eating patterns as well as on their role in modeling, offering, and regulating food choices. Families should be educated and given guidance about the effect that they have on their child’s development of lifelong physical activity and nutritious eating habits. Pediatricians should encourage dietary practices that focus on moderation rather than overconsumption, and healthful choices rather than restrictive eating patterns. Routine physical activity should be consciously promoted by the physician. Physicians should suggest setting limits for sedentary activities such as watching television or playing video games to less than 2 hours per day. Steps for optimal prevention should include a combination of dietary and physical activity interventions [2].
6 months) to check for continued upward shifts in BMI [2,36,41]. In addition, anticipatory guidance and brief negotiations for behavior change with parents should be undertaken to change risk eating and physical activity habits.
OVERWEIGHT Families of overweight children require consistent feedback from pediatric health care professionals to determine whether nutrition and physical activity recommendations are providing successful outcomes. Height, weight, and BMI should be calculated regularly (e.g., every 3 months).
SEVERE OVERWEIGHT Severely overweight youth require intense interventions and regular medical monitoring. This is ideally provided by a multidisciplinary team with experience working with pediatric patients and their families. Patients should be examined at least monthly, especially if they are following a calorie-restricted diet. Monitoring to determine the effect of the weight loss plan on lipid profiles and diabetes risk should be conducted quarterly. An expert committee has provided an algorithm to assist pediatric health care professionals with monitoring [29]. In general, a one-half pound/week weight loss is optimal.
SUMMARY For all children, parental education in the medical office setting is strongly recommended regardless of the child’s current weight condition, but especially if the parents are obese. Children who are at risk for overweight by virtue of family history or other predisposing factors become increasingly more susceptible as they mature. Thus, age-appropriate, targeted, family-based dietary and physical activity preventive strategies should be consistently promoted, and basic therapeutic interventions should be made available in pediatric clinical settings. The economic burden of obesity-associated illness during childhood in the United States has increased by 43% in the last two decades [66]. Cost-effective individual and group treatment approaches are available and should be both encouraged and financially supported by the pediatric medical community. Academic programs that work simultaneously to conduct research, provide training opportunities for pediatric professionals, and evaluate ongoing interventions to prevent and treat overweight children are also vitally important to reverse this pediatric epidemic.
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25. Berenson, G. S., S. R. Srinivasan, W. Bao, W. P. Newman, 3rd, R. E. Tracy, and W. A. Wattigney. Association between multiple cardiovascular risk factors and atherosclerosis in children and young adults. The Bogalusa Heart Study. N Engl J Med. 338:1650–1656, 1998. 26. Shulman, G. I. Cellular mechanisms of insulin resistance. J Clin Invest. 106:171–176, 2000. 27. Goran, M. I., R. N. Bergman, and B. A. Gower. Influence of total vs. visceral fat on insulin action and secretion in African American and white children. Obes Res. 9:423–431, 2001. 28. Teixeira, P. J., L. B. Sardinha, S. B. Going, and T. G. Lohman. Total and regional fat and serum cardiovascular disease risk factors in lean and obese children and adolescents. Obes Res. 9:432–442, 2001. 29. Barlow, S. E. and W. H. Dietz. Obesity evaluation and treatment: Expert Committee recommendations. The Maternal and Child Health Bureau, Health Resources and Services Administration and the Department of Health and Human Services. Pediatrics. 102:E29, 1998. 30. Edmunds, L., E. Waters, and E. J. Elliott. Evidence based paediatrics: Evidence based management of childhood obesity. BMJ. 323:916–919, 2001. 31. Johnson, C. Initial consultation for patients with bulimia and anorexia nervosa: the Diagnostic Survey for Eating Disorders (DSED). In: D. M. Garner, Garfinkel, P.E., Ed. Handbook of Psychotherapy for Anorexia and Bulimia. New York: Guilford, 1985, pp. 19–51. 32. Birch, L. Development of food acceptance patterns. Dev Psychol. 26:515–519, 1990. 33. Field, A. E., S. B. Austin, C. B. Taylor, S. Malspeis, B. Rosner, H. R. Rockett et al. Relation between dieting and weight change among preadolescents and adolescents. Pediatrics. 112:900–906, 2003. 34. Schwimmer, J. B. Managing overweight in older children and adolescents. Pediatr Ann. 33:39–44, 2004. 35. Kiess, W., A. Reich, G. Muller, A. Galler, T. Kapellen, K. Raile et al. Obesity in childhood and adolescence: clinical diagnosis and management. J Pediatr Endocrinol Metabol. 14(Suppl 6):1431–1440, 2001. 36. Barlow, S. E. and W. H. Dietz. Management of child and adolescent obesity: summary and recommendations based on reports from pediatricians, pediatric nurse practitioners, and registered dietitians. Pediatrics. 110:236–238, 2002. 37. Robinson, T. N. Reducing children’s television viewing to prevent obesity: a randomized controlled trial. JAMA. 282:1561–1567, 1999. 38. Epstein, L. H., A. M. Valoski, L. S. Vara, J. McCurley, L. Wisniewski, M. A. Kalarchian et al. Effects of decreasing sedentary behavior and increasing activity on weight change in obese children. Health Psychol. 14:109–115, 1995. 39. Inge, T. H., N. F. Krebs, V. F. Garcia, J. A. Skelton, K. S. Guice, R. S. Strauss et al. Bariatric surgery for severely overweight adolescents: concerns and recommendations. Pediatrics. 114:217–223, 2004. 40. Sugerman, H. J., E. L. Sugerman, E. J. DeMaria, J. M. Kellum, C. Kennedy, Y. Mowery, and L. G. Wolfe. Bariatric surgery for severely obese adolescents. J Gastrointest Surg. 7:102–107; discussion 107–108, 2003. 41. Ariza, A. J., R. S. Greenberg, and R. Unger. Childhood overweight: management approaches in young children. Pediatr Ann. 33:33–38, 2004. 42. Davis, K. and K. K. Christoffel. Obesity in preschool and school-age children. Treatment early and often may be best. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 148:1257–1261, 1994. 43. O’Brien, S. H., R. Holubkov, and E. C. Reis. Identification, evaluation, and management of obesity in an academic primary care center. Pediatrics. 114:e154–e159, 2004. 44. Robinson, T. N. Defining obesity in children and adolescents: clinical approaches. Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr. 33:313–320, 1993. 45. Perrin, E. M., K. B. Flower, and A. S. Ammerman. Body mass index charts: useful yet underused. J Pediatr. 144:455–460, 2004. 46. Carlisle, L. K., S. T. Gordon, and M. S. Sothern. Can obesity prevention work for our children? J La State Med Soc. 157(Spec No 1):S34–S41, 2005. 47. Barlow, S. E., W. H. Dietz, W. J. Klish, and F. L. Trowbridge. Medical evaluation of overweight children and adolescents: reports from pediatricians, pediatric nurse practitioners, and registered dietitians. Pediatrics. 110:222–228, 2002. 48. Sothern, M. S. Obesity prevention in children: physical activity and nutrition. Nutrition. 20:704–708, 2004.
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Handbook of Pediatric Obesity: Clinical Management 49. Whitaker, R. C. Predicting preschooler obesity at birth: the role of maternal obesity in early pregnancy. Pediatrics. 114:e29–e36, 2004. 50. O’Loughlin, J., G. Paradis, G. Meshefedjian, and K. Gray-Donald. A five-year trend of increasing obesity among elementary schoolchildren in multiethnic, low-income, inner-city neighborhoods in Montreal, Canada. Int J Obes Relat Metabol Disord. 24:1176–1182, 2000. 51. Strauss, R. S. and J. Knight. Influence of the home environment on the development of obesity in children. Pediatrics. 103:e85, 1999. 52. Chen, W., C. C. Lin, C. T. Peng, C. I. Li, H. C. Wu, J. Chiang et al. Approaching healthy body mass index norms for children and adolescents from health-related physical fitness. Obes Rev. 3:225–232, 2002. 53. Kuczmarski, R. J., C. L. Ogden, L. M. Grummer-Strawn, K. M. Flegal, S. S. Guo, R. Wei et al. CDC growth charts: United States. Adv Data. 1–27, 2000. 54. Pietrobelli, A., M. S. Faith, D. B. Allison, D. Gallagher, G. Chiumello, and S. B. Heymsfield. Body mass index as a measure of adiposity among children and adolescents: a validation study. J Pediatr. 132:204–210, 1998. 55. Ravussin, E. and J. F. Gautier. [Determinants and control of energy expenditure]. Ann Endocrinol (Paris). 63:96–105, 2002. 56. Goran, M. I. Handbook of Pediatric Obesity: Epidemiology, Etiology, and Prevention: Boca Raton: Taylor & Francis, 2006. 57. Schechter, M. S. Technical report: diagnosis and management of childhood obstructive sleep apnea syndrome. Pediatrics. 109:e69, 2002. 58. Ford, E. S., D. M. Mannino, S. C. Redd, A. H. Mokdad, D. A. Galuska, and M. K. Serdula. Weightloss practices and asthma: findings from the behavioral risk factor surveillance system. Obes Res. 11:81–86, 2003. 59. Gennuso, J., L. H. Epstein, R. A. Paluch, and F. Cerny. The relationship between asthma and obesity in urban minority children and adolescents. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 152:1197–1200, 1998. 60. Chinn, S. Obesity and asthma: evidence for and against a causal relation. J Asthma. 40:1–16, 2003. 61. Jonides, L., V. Buschbacher, and S. E. Barlow. Management of child and adolescent obesity: psychological, emotional, and behavioral assessment. Pediatrics. 110:215–221, 2002. 62. Lee, S., S. Hoerr, and R. Schiffman. Screening for infants’ and toddlers’ dietary quality through maternal diet. Amer J Matern/Child Nurs. 30:60–66, 2005. 63. Rivara, F. P., R. Whitaker, P. M. Sherman, and L. Cuttler. Influencing the childhood behaviors that lead to obesity: role of the pediatrician and health care professional. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 157:719–720, 2003. 64. Sothern, M. S. Exercise as a modality in the treatment of childhood obesity. Pediatr Clin North Am. 48:995–1015, 2001. 65. Wang, L., Q. Yang, R. Lowry, and H. Wechsler. Economic analysis of a school-based obesity prevention program. Obes Res. 11:1313–1324, 2003.
Assessment of 8 Nutritional the At-Risk for Overweight and Overweight Child and Adolescent Nancy Copperman CONTENTS Introduction ......................................................................................................................................95 Home Environment Assessment ......................................................................................................96 School Environment Assessment .....................................................................................................97 Community Environment Assessment.............................................................................................97 Physical Activity Assessment ..........................................................................................................97 Psychosocial Assessment .................................................................................................................98 Dietary Intake Assessment...............................................................................................................98 Physical and Laboratory Assessments...........................................................................................100 Nutritional Care Plan and Case Management ...............................................................................102 References ......................................................................................................................................102
INTRODUCTION In the mid 1900s, pediatric health professionals would screen and treat children and adolescents for issues related to growth and development, but obesity was not a prevalent nutritional concern. Recommending and assessing adequate caloric and nutrient intakes for infants, toddlers, schoolaged children, and adolescents in relation to their growth and development was within the routine clinical training and practice of pediatric health professionals. However, in the 21st century, American children and adolescents are plagued with an obesity epidemic. One out of every five children in the United States is classified as overweight [1]. Obesity is now the most prevalent nutritional disease in the pediatric population, and pediatric health professionals are now faced with a disease that has no effective surgical or pharmacological interventions but that, if left untreated, results in signs and symptoms of chronic disease in adolescence [2]. Therefore, health professionals must enhance their clinical skills to become proficient in screening, identifying, and treating at risk for overweight and overweight children and adolescents. They need to be able to identify environmental and genetic promoters of obesity, assess their effect on the child and family, and enable the child and family to make lifestyle changes. The following sections describe various components of the nutritional assessment of children and adolescents that will enable to practitioner to develop a treatment plan that addresses the needs of the child or adolescent and his or her family.
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HOME ENVIRONMENT ASSESSMENT In the past 40 years, there has been a dramatic increase in dual-income families. More women are working outside the home, with homemaking responsibilities being shared by all family members or outside caretakers. This new dynamic can affect family meal and snack patterns, resulting in more outside dining, prepared convenience foods, or shared meal preparation responsibilities. Children may receive less supervision with after-school food and activity selections. Older siblings may be responsible for child care of younger siblings and for food preparation for the family. Extended family members such as grandparents or other relatives may assume the roles of caretaker and food preparer. Child care may be provided in a commercial daycare or after-school care setting in which younger children consume two meals and daily snacks up to 5 days per week and schoolage children receive afternoon snacks. Therefore, understanding which family member or caretaker plays significant roles in food selection and preparation is key to helping the family develop nutrition strategies to foster healthful eating. Specific queries as to who is responsible for purchasing, preparing, and serving food must be included in a comprehensive nutrition assessment. As family schedules become more hectic, family meals occur less frequently in households. Often, families rely on outside dining or frozen convenience meals between or after activities. Meals may be consumed in cars in transit to or from an activity. Eating may be rushed or hurried to conform to the family schedule. Data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture indicates that from 1977 to 1996, energy consumed outside the home increased from 17% to almost 35% of the daily energy intake, with the percentage of energy contributed from fast food almost tripling [3]. In addition, several studies have shown the relationship between fast food consumption and total energy intake and body weight in adolescents [4,5]. Children have been shown to consume more energy when dining outside the home than when eating in the home [6]. Conversely, in-home, family meals have been shown to increase nutrient quality of the meal by decreasing nutrient-sparse foods and increasing fruit and vegetable consumption [7]. Assessing the frequency of outside or “on the run” dining verses in-home family meals may provide the practitioner with an insight into problematic family eating behaviors. Family composition can be an important influence on dietary intake and feeding practices in families. Children of divorced parents with various custody arrangements and visitation rights can live in separate households, consuming significantly different foods and beverages in each setting. The divorced spouses’ awareness and priority in addressing the issue of overweight may be similar or markedly different. The children may use family discord to manipulate family dining practices causing inconsistencies in applying nutrition interventions between households. Inquiring about these issues in divorced families can aid the practitioner in identifying supportive family members, in communicating with the different households, and in assessing the educational needs of each household to support recommended lifestyle changes. The relationship between the parents may dictate scheduling joint or separate consultation sessions with the parents, child, and practitioner. An inventory of the variety and amounts of foods and beverages available to the child or adolescent and his or her family in the home may reveal the degree to which the home food environment is nutritious or toxic. A pantry full of high-calorie, nutrient-sparse foods and beverages provides stiff competition to the bowl of fruits and a bottle of water on the kitchen table. Grimm et al. demonstrated that parental soda consumption was correlated with increased soda consumption of children, especially when the beverage was stocked in the home [8]. Inquiring about the food habits and preferences of individual family members may identify barriers to the successful weight management of the child or adolescent. Some examples may be parental concerns about weight gain for thin siblings conflicting with concerns about weight loss for overweight siblings. Parental ambivalence about eating habits and their effect on weight management may lead to the presence of nonnutritious family food selections in the home. It is important to address the presence of calorically dense but nutrient-sparse foods and beverages in the home, their role in family eating patterns, and the effect these items have on the nutritional status of the family. This focus will
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enable the family to modify their home feeding environment to foster healthy food choices for the entire family.
SCHOOL ENVIRONMENT ASSESSMENT According to data from the USDA Economic Research Council, school meals account for approximately 10% of foods eaten outside the home [3]. Participation in school meals can include school breakfast, snack, and lunch programs. Some children and adolescents are eligible for free or reduced school meals, whereas others are required to self pay at a nominal cost. Other sources of food and beverages provided in schools include à la carte snack programs, vending machines, special events, and fundraising drives. Recent advocacy by parents, community groups, health professionals, government agencies, and legislators has led to reforms in school food and beverage nutrient standards that affect meals, snacks and vending machines, and fundraising food selections in some school districts. However, the reforms have not reached the majority of the schools in the United States. The degree of participation in these programs varies, as do the food selections offered by the schools and chosen by the children and adolescents. The practitioner can assess the effect of school dining on weight management interventions by gathering information on the extent of participation (how many meals/snacks per week including after-school programs), reason for participation (economic, food preference, peer pressure, religious dietary restrictions), and the food choices available for the student. All these factors influence the food selections made by the child or adolescent, and ultimately the nutritional quality of his or her diet.
COMMUNITY ENVIRONMENT ASSESSMENT Food availability is a major factor in the food purchasing habits of a family that can determine the nutrient quality of the family’s diet. Food availability includes economic resources, food purchasing options, and transportation. Families that have limited financial resources may qualify for federal food programs such as WIC and food stamps. Participation in these programs can provide nutrition education and the financial support to help stretch food dollars, thereby enabling the family to purchase and consume healthier foods. Community food banks may provide sources for foods that can supplement household food inventories during periods of financial hardship that might occur for a short time between household paychecks. Some families opt to shop at food warehouses to reduce food costs. These outlets provide bulk foods at a lower per unit cost than at traditional supermarkets. However, although some bulk foods may be attractive in cost, they may contain significant amounts of energy, saturated fats, and sugar. The type of store accessible to the family determines food-purchasing options. If the family has transportation and the ability to carry quantities of foodstuffs home from the store, many options such as food warehouses, supermarkets, or food cooperatives may be available to the family. However, if transportation and delivery of foodstuffs are limited, then food-purchasing options are limited. Depending on the neighborhood, small grocery stores or bodegas that stock limited inventories at high cost may be the only option for some households. Assessing the family’s food availability as well as the family’s understanding of food consumerism principles, such as menu planning, food preparation, and food purchasing practices, can identify hurdles to the implementation of healthy lifestyle changes.
PHYSICAL ACTIVITY ASSESSMENT Recent data have shown that children and adolescents in the United States have become more sedentary, with significant declines in physical activity as children, especially females, become
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adolescents [9]. Increased body mass index (BMI) has been correlated to increased hours spent television viewing as well as increased time playing video games [10,11]. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends less than 2 hours of television time per day and 1 hour or more of physical activity per day [12,13]. Making parents aware of these guidelines can help frame the discussion about appropriate activity patterns. Several questions may provide an insight into the child’s/adolescent’s and family’s physical activity patterns. How often do you (the child/adolescent/ parent/family) participate in physical activity each day or week? How much time do you spend participating in sedentary activities such as television viewing and playing video games? Is it safe to play outside in your neighborhood? (Safety issues can include crime rate, sidewalks, supervision, safe parks or fields, and the amount of daylight hours.) Are there any opportunities to engage in physical activity inside the home or apartment? (The opportunities can include lighted safe stairs, exercise machines, a play area such as a basement or den, and audio players.) The answers to these questions can identify barriers and opportunities to increasing physical activity.
PSYCHOSOCIAL ASSESSMENT An assessment of the child’s/adolescent’s and family’s readiness to make lifestyle changes is an important barometer of whether weight-management interventions will be effective. Several studies in adults and adolescents have shown that stage of change can influence behavioral change [14,15]. An adolescent who is ambivalent about modifying his or her lifestyle may exhibit opposition and poor adherence to weight-management interventions, leading to subsequent program failure and weight gain. A family who is not ready to make lifestyle changes will not provide a supportive environment for their child. By identifying the older child’s/adolescent’s and family’s readiness to change, the practitioner can integrate specific counseling strategies related to their stage of change into the weight management intervention. A tool for addressing these stages of change and developing appropriate intervention strategies can be found in the tool section of Bright Futures in Practice: Physical Activity [16]. Overweight children and adolescents can present psychological manifestations that include low self-esteem, poor peer socialization, and depression. Overweight children and adolescents may also have eating disorders such as bulimia and binge-eating disorders. Screening children and adolescents for psychological issues and eating disorders is an important component of the nutritional assessment. Several screening tools are available [17–19]. If any of these psychological disorders is suspected, referral for a comprehensive psychological evaluation is warranted. In the case of a suspected eating disorder, an evaluation by a multidisciplinary team that specializes in pediatric eating disorders is recommended.
DIETARY INTAKE ASSESSMENT The self-report of dietary intake by overweight children and adults has been shown to be inaccurate. Researchers have shown that food records from overweight pediatric patients tend to underestimate caloric intake when compared with actual energy expenditure [20]. The assessment of the dietary intake of overweight children and adolescents can be performed using a global assessment that is composed of self-administered 3-day food records, nutrition questionnaires, and a dietary interview performed by a registered dietitian [21] or other health professional. By using self-report coupled with a dietary interview, the resulting nutritional intake data can be more reliable for the practitioner. The use of either the global assessment or an individual component will depend on personnel, time constraints, technology, and clinical care needs. The global assessment requires the child or adolescent and family to be trained in the recording of a 3-day food record (2 weekdays and 1 weekend day). The training includes educating the child and family on how to list (including times and places the foods were consumed) and describe
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(portion size, brand, food preparation) all foods and beverages consumed over the 3-day period. The recorders need to know how to record accurate portion sizes or amounts of all food consumed inside and outside of the home. A packet containing contact information for a person of whom the family can ask questions related to the food records, food recording sheets, written instructions, and pictorial methods of describing foods will improve the quality of the records. For younger children in daycare centers or at babysitters’ homes, the caretaker needs to be involved in this food recording process. Adding questions to the end of each day’s recording that prompt for missing items, assessment of daily intake (less, more, or typical), and completeness of record (complete, incomplete) can improve accuracy and analysis. The practitioner can explain to the family that the purpose of the record is to accurately represent what the child or adolescent is eating rather than judge whether his or her diet is “good or bad.” Adolescents may prefer to complete their records on their own with the understanding that the analysis will be kept confidential and not shared with their parents. If the child or adolescent spends time in two households, two sets of food records may be warranted. The food records offer the child or adolescent and family the opportunity to actually reflect on what types and amounts of foods are eaten, as well as where they are consuming these foods. This simple form of self-monitoring can be very enlightening for the child or adolescent, family, and practitioner. In research settings, a 24-hour multiple-day food record pass may be used. In this case, the child, adolescent, and family receive similar training to that above, but the dietary intake data is collected by means of a 24-hour food recall and 24-hour food record, reviewed by a dietitian either in person or via telephone. This method was found to be more reliable for group intakes than for individual intakes [22]. The food records can be returned before the counseling session and analyzed with computer software. Several nutrient analysis programs are available, and their features vary according to their cost. The practitioner must determine the needs of the practice such as client education, clinical care, research, or a combination of these. If the records are to be used for research, then the accuracy and scope of the database; the flexibility of analysis of meals, snacks, foods, and food components; and the ease of export of nutritional data for statistical analysis using commercial software would be of concern to the researcher. In clinical care situations, the accuracy of the database, ease of data entry, cost, and client education reports would be of greater importance. Some practitioners may choose not to formally analyze the food records but, rather, to clinically review them to assess for overall dietary quality. Nutritional questionnaires include food frequency questionnaires that inquire how many times in a specified time period a person consumes certain foods, beverages, or food groups. The format of the questionnaire can require the respondent to provide a written answer to a question or circle a response on a scale. The answers to the questions can be used in conjunction with a Likert Scale, which can be used to score the questionnaire. The score can then be used to evaluate the quality of the diet. Limitations of this method include the validity of the measurement or questionnaire and the scope of the nutrient information obtained. The advantage of nutritional questionnaires is that they are easy to administer, require minimal patient training, are inexpensive, and can be designed to address specific eating patterns and food consumption. Health professionals, other than registered dietitians, may find this measure easier to interpret than a formal food record nutrient analysis. The third component of nutrient intake assessment is a dietary interview. The dietary interview is usually conducted by a registered dietitian or other health professional with nutrition training. The interview comprises a nutrition history of allergies, supplements, medications, and past feeding practices; recent changes to child or adolescent or family diets; typical intake for meals and snacks for weekdays and weekends, including foods and beverages eaten inside and outside the home; schedule of meals/snacks; current feeding practices; and child or adolescent and family nutritional concerns or conflicts. If the child or adolescent spends time in multiple households or has multiple caretakers, all parents or caretakers should be interviewed either in person or by phone when possible.
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Feeding practices that have been related to overweight in children and adolescents have been identified. They include parental restriction of childhood eating [23], speed of eating [24–26], increased portion size [27], increased consumption of soda [28], and frequency of fast food meals [5]. Children ages 6 to 11 years consume on average only 2.5 servings of fruit and vegetables per day, which is only half of their recommended 5 servings per day. Data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) III survey indicate that adolescents consume less than one third of their recommended fruit and vegetable intakes [3]. Data from the 1994–1996 and 1998 U.S. Department of Agriculture Continuing Survey of Food Intakes by Individuals for youth, ages 6 to 17 years, indicate that individuals with increased consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages, sugars and sweets, and sweetened grains had a decreased likelihood of meeting the dietary reference intakes for calcium, folate, and iron [29]. The information from the dietary intake assessment should identify overly consumed, highcalorie, nutrient-sparse foods and beverages; locations and times that these foods are consumed; feeding practices that promote the overconsumption of these foods; and child or adolescent and family awareness of these eating behaviors. In addition, nutrient intake deficiencies such as inadequate intakes of calcium, fiber, iron, folic acid, and fat-soluble and water-soluble vitamins should become apparent. Identifying obesegenic feeding practices and nutrient intake deficiencies can aid the practitioner, child or adolescent, and family to develop strategies to modify these eating behaviors.
PHYSICAL AND LABORATORY ASSESSMENTS In the context of nutritional assessment of the at risk for overweight or overweight child or adolescent, physical findings obtained by a medical exam, coupled with anthropometrics, blood pressure measurements, and laboratory assessments obtained by a health professional, are important in the formulation of weight management goals and evaluation of treatment outcomes. Initial assessment of anthropometrics including accurate height and weight measurements, calculation of BMI, and correct plotting of data points on age- and sex-appropriate growth charts enables the practitioner to assess the weight status of the child or adolescent. This assessment along with the absence or presence of any comorbidity allows the practitioner to determine weight management goals (see Figures 8.1 and 8.2) [30]. Anthropometrics are the most widely used clinical tool in the evaluation of pediatric growth and development. In assessing the overweight status of a child or adolescent, accurate and reliable weight and height measurements are essential because they will be used to calculate the BMI Recommendations for Weight Goals 2 to 7 years BMI* 85th–94th %ile
Weight maintenance
BMI* >95th %ile Complication no
Complication yes
Weight maintenance
Weight loss
* Children and adolescents in this group should be encouraged to reduce their weight by 1 pound per month to eventually achieve a BMI less than the 85th %ile Medical complications include mild hypertension, dyslipidemias, insulin resistance, sleep apnea, genu varum, and cutaneous candidiasis
FIGURE 8.1 Obesity evaluation and treatment: expert committee recommendations for ages 2–7 years. Reprinted with permission from Barlow E and Deitz WH. Obesity evaluation and treatment: Expert Committee recommendations. Pediatrics. 102(3):1–11, 1998.
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Recommendations for Weight Goals >7 years BMI* 85th–94th %ile Complication Complication no no Weight maintenance
BMI* >95th %ile Weight loss
Weight loss
* Children and adolescents in this group should be encouraged to reduce their weight by 1 pound per month to eventually achieve a BMI less than the 85th %ile Medical complications include mild hypertension, dyslipidemias, insulin resistance, sleep apnea, genu varum, and cutaneous candidiasis
FIGURE 8.2 Obesity evaluation and treatment: expert committee recommendations for ages >7 years. Reprinted with permission from Barlow E and Deitz WH. Obesity evaluation and treatment: Expert Committee recommendations. Pediatrics. 102(3):1–11, 1998.
(weight [kg]/height [m2]). Weights can be recorded on a digital or triple-beam balance scale, and heights can be measured by a wall-mounted stadiometer. Children and adolescents should be gowned and in bare feet. Some pediatric patients refuse to wear gowns; therefore, they should be instructed to bring the same lightweight clothing to every visit for anthropometric measurements. The practitioner should also stock large adult gowns suitable for adolescents weighing over 200 lbs in addition to pediatric gowns. Heights should be measured on a wall-mounted stadiometer with the child or adolescent in bare feet; he or she should be standing comfortably erect against a perpendicular measuring unit with a sliding headboard (wall-mounted stadiometer). The feet should be as close together as possible, and the heels, buttocks, and shoulders should touch the measuring unit. The headboard should be lowered against the top of the head with the head upright and the chin parallel to the floor. The height, weight, and calculated BMI can be plotted on appropriate Centers for Disease Control and Prevention age and gender growth charts. More information on calculating BMI and plotting anthropometrics is available at http://www.cdc.gov/nchs. Serial laboratory assessments, height and weight measurements, and BMI calculations provide a method of formulating initial treatment goals and evaluating treatment outcomes as long as the measurements are consistent and accurate. Other physical findings are important components in nutritional assessment. Tanner Staging, which assigns a stage of sexual development to the child or adolescent, can be used to assess the growth potential of a child or adolescent. Menstrual history for females is also important for assessment of growth potential, as the female adolescent’s growth spurt generally occurs in the year before the onset of menses. By monitoring weight fluctuations during the menstrual cycle, the practitioner can track weight status according to the effect of fluid retention before menses (wet weight) and diuresis postmenses (dry weight) to assess overall anthropometric response to lifestyle changes. The presence of acanthosis nigricans is significant in that it is a cutaneous marker of insulin resistance. All of these physical and laboratory findings highlight the importance of a multidisciplinary team approach to the evaluation of the overweight child or adolescent. Educating the child or adolescent and family about the significance of abnormal physical findings and laboratory assays, BMI, and the BMI percentiles can be a useful counseling tool in pediatric weight management. Using the changes in laboratory parameters and physical findings as outcome measures for evaluating the progress of the child or adolescent can help the family reduce the emphasis on weight as the only outcome. Reduction of cardiac risk factors coupled with a stable weight or BMI will positively affect health outcomes for the child or adolescent. Understanding the
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importance of multiple outcomes as a measure of progress toward weight management can enable the child or adolescent and family to realize that healthy eating and exercise are lifelong commitments.
NUTRITIONAL CARE PLAN AND CASE MANAGEMENT Once the nutritional assessment has been completed, the practitioner can refer to the recommendations of Barlow and Dietz for weight goals. Depending on the age, BMI, and comorbidities present, weight-maintenance or weight-loss goals have been recommended for children ages 2 to 7 years and 7 years and older (see Figures 8.1 and 8.2). It is important to note that a weight loss goal of 1 pound per month is recommended with an appropriate weight goal below the 85% for BMI for age and sex. Before their pubertal growth spurt, children usually grow 2 inches per year. Each inch in growth without subsequent weight gain represents approximately a 5-pound weight loss, as demonstrated by a reduction in BMI. A child who loses 1 pound per month for a year and gains 2 inches in height during that year, even though he or she only loses 12 lb, actually exhibits almost a 22-lb weight loss, resulting in a significant reduction in BMI and BMI percentile. Explaining the rationale of the recommended weight goals to children, adolescents, and their families can help clarify unrealistic weight loss expectations and lead to more attainable weight goals. The practitioner can adapt the intensity of lifestyle interventions to the severity of the overweight condition, the findings of nutritional assessment, the readiness of the child or adolescent and family to make lifestyle modifications, and the clinical resources available in the community. In other chapters of this book, several nutrition, physical activity, and behavioral interventions and their appropriateness will be discussed. A common aspect of all these interventions/programs is frequent visits with the staff, such as weekly, biweekly, or monthly for an extended period of time greater than 1 year. Each practitioner should communicate with other disciplines (medical, nutrition, psychology, exercise) involved in the care of the child or adolescent to coordinate and provide optimum care. Weight management for the at risk for overweight or the overweight pediatric patient and his or her family should include an interdisciplinary approach to modify the families’ nutritional and physical activity patterns to enable them to attain the needed skills for a lifetime of weight management.
REFERENCES 1. Hedley A, Ogden C, Johnson C, Carroll M, Curtin L, Flegal K. Prevalence of overweight and obesity among US children, adolescents, and adults, 1999–2002. JAMA. 2004;291:2847–2850. 2. Bao W, Srinivasan SR, Wattigniey WA, Berenson GS. Persistance of multiple cardiovascular risk clustering related to syndrome X from childhood to adulthood. The Bogalusa Heart Study. Arch Intern Med. 1994;1954:1842–1847. 3. Economic Research Service, UDSA. Food Rev. 2002;25(3). 4. French SA, Story M, Newmark-Szainer D, Fulkerson JA, Hannan P. Fast food restaurant use among adolescents: associations with nutrient intake, food choices and behavioral and psychosocial variables. Intl J Obes. 2001;25:1823–1833. 5. Bowman SA, Gortmaker SL, Ebbeling CB, Pereira MA, Ludwig DS. Effects of fast-food consumption on energy intake and diet quality among children in a national household survey. Pediatrics. 2004;113:112–118. 6. Zoumas-Morse C, Rock CL, Sobo EJ, Neuhouser ML. Children’s pattern of macronutrient intake and associations with restaurant and home eating. J Amer Diet Assoc. 2001;101:923–925. 7. Gillman MW, Rifas-Shiman SL, Fraiser AL. Family dinner and diet quality among older children and adolescents. Arch Family Med. 2000;9:235–240. 8. Grimm GC, Harnack L, Story M. Factors associated with soft drink consumption in school-aged children. J Amer Diet Assoc. 2004;104:1244–1249.
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9. Kimm SY, Glynn NW, Kriska AM, Barton BA, Kronsberg SS, Daniels SR et al. Decline in physical activity in black girls and white girls during adolescence. New Engl J Med. 2002;5;347:709–715. 10. McMurray RG, Harrell JS, Deng S, Bradley CB, Cox LM, Bangdiwala. The influence of physical activity, socioeconomic status, and ethnicity on weight status of adolescents. Obes Res. 2000;8:130–139. 11. Anderson RE, Crespo CJ, Bartlett SJ, Cheskin LJ, Pratt M. Relationship of physical activity and television watching with body weight and level of fatness among children. JAMA. 1998;279(12):938–942. 12. American Academy of Pediatrics. Committee on Communications. Children adolescents, and television. Pediatrics. 1995;96:786–787. 13. American Academy of Pediatrics. Committee on Nutrition. Prevention of pediatric overweight and obesity. Pediatrics. 2003;112(2):424–430. 14. Watt RG. Stages of change for sugar and fat reduction in an adolescent sample. Commun Dental Health. 1996;14:102–107. 15. Curry SJ, Kristal AR, Bowen DJ. An application of the stage of change model of behavior change to dietary fat restriction. Health Educ Res. 1992;7:97–105. 16. Patrick K, Spear B, Holt K, Sofka D. Eds. Bright Futures in Practice: Physical Activity. Arlington, VA: National Center for Education in Maternal and Child Health, 2002. 17. Story M, Holt K, Sofka D. Eds. Bright Futures in Practice: Nutrition. Arlington, VA: National Center for Education in Maternal and Child Health, 2002. 18. American Dietetic Association. Position of the American Dietetic Association: Nutrition intervention in the treatment of anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, and eating disorders not otherwise specified (EDNOS). J Amer Diet Assoc. 2001;101:810–819. 19. Garner DM, Garfinkel PE. Eds. Handbook of Treatment for Eating Disorders. New York: Guilford Press, 1997. 20. Bandini LG, Schoeller DA, Cyr HN, Dietz WH. Validity of reported energy intakes in obese and nonobese adolescents. Amer J Clin Nutr. 1990;52:421–425. 21. Copperman N, Jacobson MS. Medical nutritional therapy for the treatment of adolescent overweight. In: Fisher M, Golden N, Eds. Adolescent Medicine: State of the Art Reviews: Spectrum of Disordered Eating: Anorexia Nervosa, Bulimia Nervosa and Obesity. Chicago: American Academy of Pediatrics, 2003: pp. 11–22. 22. Johnson RK, Driscoll P, Goran MI. Comparison of multiple-pass 24-hour recall estimates of energy intake with total energy expenditure determined by the doubly labeled water method in young children. J Amer Diet Assoc. 1996;96:1140–1144. 23. Johnson SL, Birch LL. Parents’ and children’s adiposity and eating style. Pediatrics. 1994;94:653–661. 24. Drabman RS, Cordura GD, Hammer D, Jarvie GJ, Horton W. Developmental trends in eating rates of normal and overweight preschool children. Child Devel. 1979;50:211–216. 25. Marston AR, London P, Cooper LM. A note on the eating behavior of children varying in weight. J Child Psychol Psych. 1976;17:221–225. 26. Barkling B, Ekman S, Rossner S. Eating behaviour in obese and normal weight 11-year-old children. Intl J Obes. 1992;16:355–360. 27. Fisher JO, Rolls BJ, Birch LL. Children’s bite size and intake of an entrée are greater with large portions than with age-appropriate or self-selected portions. Amer J Clin Nutr. 2003;77:1164–1170. 28. Ludwig DS, Peterson KE, Gortmaker SL. Relationship between consumption of sugar sweetened drinks and childhood obesity: a prospective, observational analysis. Lancet. 2001;357:505–508. 29. Frary CD, Johnson RK, Wang MQ. Children and adolescents’ choices of foods and beverages high in added sugars are associated with intakes of key nutrients and food groups. J Adolesc Health. 2004;34:56–63. 30. Barlow E, Deitz, WH. Obesity evaluation and treatment: Expert Committee recommendations. Pediatrics. 1998;102(3):1–11.
and Psychosocial 9 Behavioral Assessment Tools T. Kristian von Almen CONTENTS Behavioral Assessments .................................................................................................................106 Achenbach Child Behavior Checklist ..................................................................................106 Social Skills Rating System .................................................................................................106 Psychosocial Assessments..............................................................................................................107 Children’s Depression Inventory..........................................................................................107 Reynolds Adolescent Depression Scale 2............................................................................107 Self-Esteem ....................................................................................................................................107 Piers–Harris Children’s Self Concept Scale, Second Edition .............................................107 Self-Perception Profile for Children ....................................................................................107 Anxiety ...........................................................................................................................................108 State-Trait Anxiety Inventory for Children..........................................................................108 Measures of Eating Disorders........................................................................................................108 The Kids’ Eating Disorder Survey.......................................................................................108 The Eating Disorder Inventory.............................................................................................108 The Eating Attitudes Test .....................................................................................................108 The Diagnostic Survey for Eating Disorders.......................................................................109 Family Measures ............................................................................................................................109 Family Adaptability and Cohesion Evaluation Scales.........................................................109 Family Environment Scale ...................................................................................................109 Conclusion......................................................................................................................................110 References ......................................................................................................................................110 Some cross-sectional, population-based studies of children and adolescents report little to no differences on standardized psychosocial or behavioral assessment measures in obese and nonobese subjects, whereas many reports have documented significant differences between these groups. The same is true when examining longitudinal, population-based studies of obese versus nonobese children and adolescents. Some researchers have reported significant differences, particularly in adolescent females, whereas others have failed to observe significant differences between groups. There are also discrepancies in data collected from clinic-referred samples of obese children and adolescents. Some researchers report little to no differences, yet most researchers have reported significant differences. The discrepancies found in these studies have been postulated to relate to differences in the study group’s social status, age, sex, ethnicity, geographic region, and parental factors, and even recent trends toward a heavier population of children and adolescents. This controversy is compounded by the fact that many of the reviewed studies have failed to use standardized or psychometrically sound psychosocial or behavioral measures. In addition, in some cases, the standardized assessment used across studies has been abbreviated, dissimilar, or a newer version of the original measure. 105
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This chapter summarizes standardized behavioral and psychosocial instruments that have been widely used in baseline and follow-up assessment of overweight children and adolescents in both population-based and clinic-referred samples. This is not meant to be a comprehensive listing of behavioral or psychosocial assessment instruments available to clinicians but, instead, details those assessments that have been most widely used to date. Though standardized, psychometrically sound assessments take 10 to 15 minutes to complete, future research should attempt to use these measures, when possible, to allow for more accurate comparisons within and between study groups.
BEHAVIORAL ASSESSMENTS ACHENBACH CHILD BEHAVIOR CHECKLIST The Achenbach Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) [1,2], parent form, is likely to be the most widely used standardized behavior problem assessment tool of obese children and adolescents, aged 6 to 18 years. The scale takes about 15 minutes to complete and consists of 118 items or statements that describe specific behavioral and emotional problems, with two open-ended items for reporting additional problems. Parents rate their child for how true each item is now or within the last 6 months, using the following scale: 0 = not true; 1 = somewhat or sometimes true; 2 = very true. The CBCL can be hand or computer scored. A total behavior problem (T) score is obtained, as are T scores for two broad categories: internalizing (e.g., withdrawn, depressed) and externalizing (e.g., acting out, aggression). The CBCL is further divided into T scores for eight subcategories of problematic behavior: aggressive behavior, anxious/depressed, attention problems, rule-breaking behavior, social problems, somatic complaints, thought problems, and withdrawn/depressed. There are also six DSM -oriented scales: affective problems, anxiety problems, somatic problems, attention deficit/hyperactivity problems, oppositional defiant problems, and conduct problems. In general, a T score greater than 67 indicates significant behavior problems in that category. There is also a social competence scale that yields a total T score, as well as T scores for involvement in activities, social interactions, and school performance. A T score less than 33 on the social competence scale indicates problems. The CBCL has been well standardized, and norms exist for both clinic-referred and normative populations. The items of the CBCL were factor analyzed to empirically identify the forms of psychopathology that actually occur in children. Further, the scales are based on new factor analyses of parents’ ratings of 4994 clinically referred children and were normed on 1753 children aged 6 to 18 years. The normative sample was reportedly representative of the 48 contiguous states across socioeconomic status, ethnicity, region, and urban–suburban–rural residence. Children were excluded from the normative sample if they had been referred for mental health or special education services within the last year. The CBCL is also available in a newly revised Spanish version. A teacher version and youth self-report version are also available, but they have been used much less frequently.
SOCIAL SKILLS RATING SYSTEM The Social Skills Rating System [3] has been used much less frequently and allows professionals to screen and classify children and adolescents suspected of having significant social behavior problems. A teacher, parent, and self-report form are available and take about 15 minutes to complete. The respondent is asked to report how often the child or teen engages in 39 to 49 statements as 0 = never, 1 = sometimes true, or 2 = very often true. The Social Skills Rating System can be scored by hand or computer. A score is generated for social skills (cooperation, assertion, responsibility, empathy, and self-control), problem behaviors (externalizing problems, internalizing problems, and hyperactivity), and academic competence. The test–retest reliability of the Social Skills Rating System ranges from .65 to .93, whereas coefficient alpha reliability ranges from .81 to .85. The subscale reliabilities range from .48 to .88.
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PSYCHOSOCIAL ASSESSMENTS CHILDREN’S DEPRESSION INVENTORY The Children’s Depression Inventory [4] is a 27-item, self-report measure and takes about 10 minutes to complete. It is the most often used measure for child depression and is appropriate for use in children and adolescents 7 to 17 years old. The individual is asked to select the statement that best describes his or her feelings during the last 2 weeks. For each item, the child has three possible answers: 0 = absence of symptoms, 1 = mild symptoms, and 2 = definite symptoms. A total score and five scaled scores are generated for negative mood, interpersonal problems, ineffectiveness, anhedonia, and negative self-esteem. A clinical cutoff score has been established to facilitate referral to a mental health professional when necessary. Hand and computer scoring are available. The normative sample included 1266 public school students (592 boys, 674 girls). Twenty-three percent of the participants were African-American, American Indian, or Hispanic in origin. Twenty percent of the children came from single-parent homes. In addition, the normative sample used for scoring the Children’s Depression Inventory was divided into groups based on age (ages 6 to 11, 12 to 17) and gender. The internal consistency coefficients of the Children’s Depression Inventory range from .71 to .89. Test–retest reliability coefficients (2 to 3-week time interval) range from .74 to .83.
REYNOLDS ADOLESCENT DEPRESSION SCALE 2 The Reynolds Adolescent Depression Scale 2 (RADS-2) [5,6] is a less frequently used adolescent selfreport measure that consists of 30 items, rated on a 4-point scale, which takes 5 to 10 minutes to complete. The RADS-2 yields five scores: overall depression, demoralization, worry and despondency, somatic, and anhedonia. The RADS-2 is hand scored using a single scoring template. Internal consistency coefficients for grades 7 to 12 range from .91 to .94. The RADS-2 has a total sample alpha reliability of .92 and a split half reliability of .91. Test–retest coefficients of .80 and .79 are reported.
SELF-ESTEEM PIERS–HARRIS CHILDREN’S SELF CONCEPT SCALE, SECOND EDITION The Piers–Harris Children’s Self Concept Scale 2 [7–9] is the most widely used measure to date of children and adolescent self-esteem. It is a revised version of the 80-item scale developed in 1969. It is appropriate for use with 7 to 18 year olds, and consists of 60 yes or no items. The measure is designed to evaluate the child’s psychological health on the basis of their perceptions and takes 10 to 15 minutes to complete. A total score and six subscale scores for physical appearance and attributes, freedom from anxiety, intellectual and school status, behavior adjustment, happiness and satisfaction, and popularity are generated. The Piers-Harris-2 has new, nationally representative norms, which are based on a sample of 1387 students, ages 7 to 18 years, from across the United States. Because the revised scales remain psychometrically equivalent to the original scales, results from the Piers–Harris 2 can be compared with those obtained using the original test. Computer scoring and interpretation are available, as is a Spanish version of the scale.
SELF-PERCEPTION PROFILE
FOR
CHILDREN
The Self-Perception Profile for Children [10] is a less frequently used, 36-item self-report scale. A global self-worth score and five domain scores — scholastic competence, social acceptance, athletic competence, physical appearance, and behavioral conduct — are generated. The manual on the Self-Perception Profile for Children is a revised version of the Perceived Competence Scale for Children. The reported internal reliability of subscales is (r = .73 to .86), and 9-month test–retest reliability is r = .8.
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ANXIETY STATE-TRAIT ANXIETY INVENTORY
FOR
CHILDREN
The State-Trait Anxiety Inventory for Children (STAIC) [11] is composed of separate, self-report scales for measuring two distinct anxiety concepts: state anxiety (S-Anxiety) and trait anxiety (T-Anxiety). It is designed for use by 9 to 12 year olds. The STAIC requires about 10 minutes to complete each scale, and children respond to items on a 3-point rating scale. The STAIC S-Anxiety scale consists of 20 statements that ask children how they feel at a particular moment in time. The S-Anxiety scale is designed to measure transitory anxiety; that is, subjective feelings of apprehension, tension, and worry that vary in intensity and fluctuate over time. The STAIC T-Anxiety scale also consists of 20 items, but children respond to these items by indicating how they generally feel. The T-Anxiety scale measures more stable individual differences in anxiety proneness. The normative group consisted of two large samples of fourth-, fifth-, and sixth-grade elementary school children from six different schools.
MEASURES OF EATING DISORDERS THE KIDS’ EATING DISORDER SURVEY The Kids’ Eating Disorder Survey [12] is a 14-item self-report inventory of eating disorder attitudes and behaviors. The instrument has been shown to have a 4-month test–retest reliability of r = 0.83 and an internal consistency of Cronbach’s α = 0.73 in a sample of 1883 fifth- through eighth-grade students. Children are asked to respond “yes”, “no”, or “I don’t know” to questions concerning five attitudes and behaviors: desire to lose weight (Do you want to lose weight now?), feeling fat (Have you ever thought that you looked fat to other people?), fear of gaining weight (Have you ever been afraid to eat because you thought you would gain weight?), dieting to lose weight (Have you ever tried to lose weight by dieting?), and fasting to lose weight (Have you ever tried to lose weight by fasting?).
THE EATING DISORDER INVENTORY The Eating Disorder Inventory [13,14] is a commonly used, standardized, self-report screening instrument for the assessment of specific eating attitudes and behavior commonly associated with anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa. It is a revised version of the original measure published in 1984. The original 64 items were retained and are grouped into eight scales (drive for thinness, bulimia, body dissatisfaction, ineffectiveness, perfectionism, interpersonal distrust, interoceptive awareness, and maturity fears). Twenty-seven new items were added into three provisional scales of asceticism, impulse regulation, and social insecurity. Internal consistency reliability of the Eating Disorder Inventory 2 scales range between .44 and .93, and test–retest reliability at 1-week ranges from .79 to .95 (for all subscales except interoceptive awareness). Reliability and construct, convergent, and discriminant validity have been demonstrated for the Eating Disorder Inventory, which has included use with adolescent populations.
THE EATING ATTITUDES TEST The Eating Attitudes Test (EAT-26) [15,16] is a widely used, standardized, self-report, 20-item screening measure adapted from the original 40-item test developed in 1979. The EAT-26 assesses a broad range of symptoms and provides a total score for disturbed eating attitudes and behavior in adolescents. The EAT-26 has acceptable criterion-related validity by significantly predicting group membership. The reliability (internal consistency) of the EAT-26 was reportedly high (α = 0.90) for an anorexia nervosa group. Total scores on the EAT-26 are derived as a sum of all items, ranging from 0 to 78. Scores that are greater than or equal to 20 on the EAT-26 are frequently associated with abnormal eating attitudes and behavior and may identify those with an eating
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disorder. The EAT-26 manual clarifies that although a score of 20 or higher is a cause of concern, it does not necessarily mean that a life-threatening condition exists. As such, individuals scoring 20 or higher on this test are encouraged to seek the advice of a qualified mental health professional who has experience with treating eating disorders.
THE DIAGNOSTIC SURVEY
FOR
EATING DISORDERS
The Diagnostic Survey for Eating Disorders (DSED) [17] is a self-report questionnaire that allows for the quantification of the frequency of disturbed eating behaviors. The DSED was not developed as a standardized, scaled instrument but, instead, provides a format for the collection of information about eating and purging behaviors. Despite having been widely used, the reliability of the DSED has not been reported, mainly because the self-reported eating and purging behaviors that are assessed appear to be somewhat changeable over time.
FAMILY MEASURES FAMILY ADAPTABILITY
AND
COHESION EVALUATION SCALES
Family Adaptability and Cohesion Evaluation Scales III (FACES III) [18] is a self-report questionnaire composed of 20 statements that asks family members to circle, on a 5-point Likert-type scale, the degree to which their family possesses certain qualities. A separate rating scale measures what the family member would like in the ideal situation. It is intended for use with all family types and can be administered to any family member over 12 years of age. It has been used to measure the degree of family functioning after intervention and treatment and to compare differences with control group families. The reliability of the subscales of FACES III has been fairly well established. Internal consistency reliability estimates of .62 for adaptability and .77 for cohesion, with a test–retest (4 to 5 weeks) estimate of .80 for adaptability and .83 for cohesion reported in the manual. FACES III is the third of a series of scales developed to assess two major dimensions of the circumplex model: adaptation and cohesion of the family. Further, the circumplex model is based on the assumption that the difference between functional and dysfunctional families is determined by the two interrelated dimensions of cohesion and adaptability. Cohesion refers to the level of attachment and emotional bonding between family members. There are four graded levels to the cohesion dimension: disengaged, separated, connected, and enmeshed. Families that are disengaged lack closeness or loyalty and are characterized as highly independent. At the other end of the cohesion scale are enmeshed families. These families are characterized by a high level of closeness, loyalty, or dependence. Adaptability is defined as the ability of the family to change in power structure, roles, and relationships to adjust to varied stressors. There are four graded levels: rigid, structured, flexible, and chaotic. Families with low levels of adaptability are classified as rigid. Rigid families are characterized by authoritarian leadership, strict negotiation, and lack of change or role modification. Families with high levels of adaptability are classified as chaotic. Chaotic family types are characterized by a lack of leadership, dramatic role shifts, erratic negotiation, and a high degree of change. A score is obtained for adaptability and cohesion, and then a specific family type is determined. There are three distinct family types, based on the interaction of adaptability and cohesion. Balanced families (assumed to be ideal) are those with a moderate level of both adaptability and cohesion. Midrange family types are extreme on one dimension and moderate on the other. Finally, extreme family types are those who are extreme on both adaptability and cohesion measures.
FAMILY ENVIRONMENT SCALE The Family Environment Scale (FES) [19] is a self-report inventory designed to measure social and environmental aspects of the family; it takes about 10 minutes to complete. The FES consists
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of 90 true or false questions and is divided into 10 subscales. Three of the FES subscales focus on the internal aspects of the family’s interpersonal relationship: cohesion, expressions, and conflict. Five of the FES subscales are concerned with goal orientation and personal growth. They are independence, achievement orientation, intellectual–cultural orientation, active–recreational orientation, and moral religious emphasis. The last two subscales (organization and control) measure aspects of family structure wuch as planning family activities or the rules and regulations used to run the family. The FES subscales have internal consistencies ranging from .61 to .79. The item-to-subscale correlation coefficients range from .45 to .58, and the test–retest reliability for a 2-month interval ranges from .68 to .86. In addition, a low to moderate interscale correlation has been reported for the 10 subscales (n = .25), indicating that the FES subscales may measure distinct but moderately related aspects of families. No significant gender difference was reported for the scale. Three separate forms of the FES are available. The Real Form (Form R) measures an individual’s perception of the actual family environment. The Ideal Form (Form I) assesses an individual’s perceptions of his or her ideal family environment. The Expectations Form (Form E) measures what an individual expects his or her family environment would be like with anticipated family changes.
CONCLUSION This chapter details standardized, psychometrically sound, behavioral and psychosocial instruments available to clinicians, which have been used in population and treatment studies of overweight children and adolescents. Although there has been a recent emphasis to screen children and adolescents on psychological, behavioral, activity and dietary parameters [20,21], few studies have used standardized assessments to measure these variables. It is no wonder, then, that there is a lack of consensus among studies related to the effects of being overweight on children’s and adolescents’ psychological and behavioral characteristics when compared with normative samples. Standardized behavioral and psychosocial measures are often criticized because they take too long to complete. Yet each measure takes an average of only 10 to 15 minutes to complete. As such, future research must attempt to use one or more of these measures, depending on time constraints, to allow for a more accurate understanding and comparison within and between overweight and normal-weight children and adolescents. A clear delineation of variables such as social status, age, sex, ethnicity, and geographic region is also essential to gain a fuller understanding of the effects of overweight on children and teens.
REFERENCES 1. Achenbach, T. M. Manual for the Child Behavior Checklist/ 4-18 and 1991 Profile. Burlington, VT, 1991. 2. Achenbach, T. M. Integrative Guide to the 1991 CBCL/ 4-18, YSR and TRF Profiles. Burlington, VT, 1991. 3. Gresham, F., Elliot, S. Social Skills Rating System. Circle Pines, MN, 1990. 4. Kovacs, M. Children’s Depression Inventory. San Antonio, TX: Multi-Health Systems, 1981. 5. Reynolds, W. M. Reynolds Adolescent Depression Scale: Professional Manual. Odessa, FL: Psychological Assessment Resources, Inc., 1987. 6. Reynolds, W. M. Reynolds Adolescent Depression Scale. In: A. B. M. Hersen. Ed. Dictionary of Behavioral Assessment Techniques. New York: Pergamon, 1988, pp. 381–383. 7. Piers, E., Harris, D. The Piers-Harris Children’s Self-Concept Scale. Los Angeles, CA: Western Psychological Services, 1969. 8. Piers, E. V. Piers-Harris Children’s Self-Concept Scale: Revised Manual. Los Angeles, CA: Western Psychological Services, 1984.
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9. Piers, E., Harris, D., Herzberg, D. The Piers-Harris Children’s Self Concept Scale. 2nd ed. Los Angeles: Western Psychological Services, 2002. 10. Harter, S. Manual for Self-Perception Profile for Children. Denver, CO, 1985. 11. Speilberger, C. D. Manual for the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory for Children. Palo Alto, CA: Consulting Psychologists Press, 1973. 12. Childress, A. C., Brewerton, T. D., Hodges, E. L., Jarrell, M. P. The Kids’ Eating Disorder Survey (KEDS): a study of middle school students. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 32:843–850, 1993. 13. Garner, D. M., Olmsted, M. P. Eating Disorder Inventory (EDI Manual). Odessa, FL: Psychological Assessment Resources, 1984. 14. Garner, D. M. The Eating Disorder Inventory-2 Professional Manual. Odessa, FL: Psychological Assessment Resources, 1991. 15. Garner, D. M., Olmsted, M. P., Bohr, Y., Garfinkel, P. E. The Eating Attitudes Test: psychometric features and clinical correlates. Psychol Med. 12:871–878, 1982. 16. Garner, D. M., Garfinkel, P. E. The Eating Attitudes Test: an index of symptoms of anorexia nervosa. Psychol Med. 9:273–279, 1979. 17. Johnson, C. Initial consultation for patients with bulimia and anorexia nervosa: The Diagnostic Survey for Eating Disorders (DSED). In: D. M. Garner, P. E. Garfinkel. Eds. Handbook of Psychotherapy for Anorexia and Bulimia. New York: Guilford Press, 1985, pp. 19–51. 18. Olson, D. H., Porner, J., Lavee, Y. Family Adaptability and Cohesion Evaluation Scales (FACES III). In: F. S. Science. Ed. Handbook of Measurements for Marriage and Family Therapy. New York: Brunner Mazel, 1985, pp. 180–185. 19. Moos, R. H., Moos, B. S. Family Environment Scale Manual. Palo Alto, CA: Consulting Psychologists Press, 1981. 20. Barlow, S. E., Dietz, W. H. Obesity evaluation and treatment: Expert Committee recommendations. The Maternal and Child Health Bureau, Health Resources and Services Administration and the Department of Health and Human Services. Pediatrics. 102:E29, 1998. 21. Jonides, L., Buschbacher, V., Barlow, S. E. Management of child and adolescent obesity: psychological, emotional, and behavioral assessment. Pediatrics. 110:215-221, 2002.
10 Exercise Testing Thomas Rowland and Mark Loftin CONTENTS Physiological Considerations.........................................................................................................113 Cardiovascular Fitness ...................................................................................................................113 Endurance Performance........................................................................................................113 Maximal Oxygen Uptake (VO2 max)..................................................................................114 “True” Cardiovascular Fitness .............................................................................................114 Autonomic Function ......................................................................................................................114 Blood Pressure ...............................................................................................................................115 Ventilatory Anaerobic Threshold ...................................................................................................115 Running/Walking Economy ...........................................................................................................115 Exercise Testing .............................................................................................................................116 References ......................................................................................................................................116
PHYSIOLOGICAL CONSIDERATIONS The exercising obese subject demonstrates a number of physiologic characteristics that distinguish him or her from the nonobese individual. In general, these findings reflect the amount of excessive body fat; that is, the quantitative changes in these physiologic variables during exercise are exhibited in direct proportion to level of obesity. Such effects of adiposity need to be appreciated when interpreting physiologic findings during exercise testing of overweight individuals.
CARDIOVASCULAR FITNESS Excessive body fat can profoundly affect cardiovascular fitness (considered in this discussion to be synonymous with aerobic fitness). The nature of this influence, however, depends on the definition of “cardiovascular fitness” being considered.
ENDURANCE PERFORMANCE The ability to perform in a distance exercise event, either time over distance or distance covered in a given time, is indirectly related to body fat content. This effect of obesity is more obvious in weight-supported activities (running, walking) and will therefore be more evident during treadmill compared with cycle exercise in the testing laboratory [1]. The effect of obesity on endurance performance is not minimal. For example, Rowland et al. found that body fat content accounted for 28% of the variance in mile run times in preadolescent boys [2], an influence similar to that of maximal oxygen uptake (VO2 max). Watson demonstrated that a 46-yard decrement in distance covered in a 12-minute walk/run occurred for every 1% increase in body fat in adolescent boys [3]. It has generally been considered that this negative effect on endurance performance reflects the inert load created by excessive fat that must be transported in weight-bearing events. Still, the 113
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potential roles of depressed fitness from a sedentary lifestyle as well as depression of “true” cardiovascular fitness (see below) need to be considered.
MAXIMAL OXYGEN UPTAKE (VO2
MAX)
The highest rate of oxygen use by the body during a progressive exercise test (VO2 max) is a physiologic marker of cardiovascular fitness. When expressed relative to body mass, VO2 max is inversely related to body fat — obesity depresses mass-relative aerobic fitness. Correlation coefficients between level of obesity and VO2 max per kilogram body mass have generally been approximately r = 0.50 [4]. The depression of VO2 max per kilogram in obese youth is largely the effect of an inflated denominator, as “per kilogram” includes their inert body fat burden. Obesity does not appear to affect the numerator, as absolute values of VO2 max in overweight youth are equal or greater than those of lean subjects [4–6]. Allometric scaling of VO2 peak has been found to have less bias than the traditional ratio method. In this procedure, stature and mass are raised to a particular power function on the basis of the association of VO2 peak (L/min) and stature and mass. Loftin et al. found that adjusting VO2 peak for stature and mass reduced the difference from 50%, found in the ratio method, to 10% (allometric method) when obese were compared with normal-weight youth [7].
“TRUE” CARDIOVASCULAR FITNESS When cardiovascular fitness is defined as the greatest level of cardiac output that can be achieved in an exhaustive exercise test (so-called “true” cardiovascular fitness), obese subjects possess a superior level of fitness compared with the nonobese. Combining data from a series of three cycle studies of height-matched nonobese [5], moderately obese [5], and morbidly obese (unpublished data) adolescent girls, Rowland et al. found a direct correlation between body mass index and absolute maximal cardiac output (r = .77) [5]. The increased maximal cardiac output in obese subjects appears to parallel their greater lean body mass rather than body fat per se [6–8]. When the maximal cardiac values in the studies by Rowland et al. [5] were related to body surface area, the positive relationship with body mass index was eliminated. These findings indicate that the reduced endurance performance and lower VO2 max per kilogram observed in obese subjects are not indicators of depressed cardiac functional reserve. As a consequence, exercise interventions for obese youth do not need to be designed with a frequency, intensity, and duration that would be required to improve true cardiovascular fitness. Instead, lowerintensity exercise (certainly more palatable to the obese child) is more appropriate as a means of increasing caloric expenditure and reducing fat burden.
AUTONOMIC FUNCTION The autonomic nervous system responds to alterations in body energy balance, and cardiac autonomic dysfunction has been identified frequently in adult subjects. The reported patterns of this response, however, have been variable and sometimes conflicting, with descriptions of decreases in both sympathetic and parasympathetic activity [9,10], increased sympathetic tone [11,12], and depressed parasympathetic influence alone [13]. Limited information is available in children. Using measures of heart rate variability, Gutin et al. found that resting vagal (parasympathetic) activity was inversely related to fat mass in 7- to 11-year-old children [14]. Supporting this, Yakinci et al. found evidence of depressed parasympathetic activity but normal sympathetic tone in obese boys and girls (mean age, 9.5 years) [15]. These observations would explain the direct correlation between body mass index and resting heart rate (r = .53) in the three studies of nonobese and obese subjects described by Rowland et al., cited above [5].
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How autonomic changes might influence cardiovascular variables during exercise in youth remains to be clarified. Most studies have indicated no differences in maximal heart rate between obese and nonobese youth [6,16]. However, Loftin et al. [17] observed significant differences in HR peak when obese were compared with normal-weight female youth. Some investigators have found a lower HR max in obese as compared with normal-weight adults [18,19]. Salvadori and colleagues also found a reduced catecholamine response in the obese adults [19]. Other researchers have also observed this response [20]. The reduced catecholamine response may have led to a lower heart rate maximum. Further research is needed to more fully explore this phenomenon.
BLOOD PRESSURE Obese children and adolescents often demonstrate systemic hypertension, and level of resting blood pressure relates to degree of adiposity [21]. As systolic blood pressure at maximal exercise typically correlates with resting values [16], greater levels of systolic pressure can be expected during exercise testing of obese subjects. Gutin et al. [22] for instance, found that maximal systolic blood pressure correlated directly with percentage body fat (r = .35) during treadmill exercise in 9- to 11-yearold children. As observed by Owens and Gutin [23], however, even in obese subjects systolic pressure at high exercise intensities is unlikely to reach levels that would interfere with completion of a treadmill or cycle testing. Tulio et al. [16] measured blood pressure responses to maximal treadmill exercise in 30 lean normotensive, 30 obese hypertensive, and 10 obese normotensive males ages 13 to 18 years. In the obese hypertensive subjects, mean systolic blood pressure rose from 148 ± 11 mm Hg at rest to 212 ± 21 mm Hg at maximal exercise, compared with respective values of 117 ± 15 to 166 ± 20 mm Hg in the lean normotensives and 107 ± 16 to 168 ± 16 mm Hg in the normotensive obese subjects. At maximal exercise systolic blood pressure was significantly related to body mass index (r = .44) [16].
VENTILATORY ANAEROBIC THRESHOLD Ventilatory anaerobic threshold (VAT) is the exercise intensity or oxygen uptake at which the rise in minute ventilation diverges upward from VO2 in a progressive exercise test. This submaximal marker of aerobic fitness may be particularly useful in assessing subjects with significant obesity, who may be less prone to provide an exhaustive effort during exercise testing. Values are typically expressed as VO2 per kilogram or as a percentage of VO2 max. Studies of VAT in obese subjects have generally indicated parallel findings to the other indicators of aerobic fitness outlined above [24,25]. That is, VAT expressed as VO2 per kg is typically lower in overweight children and adolescents, reflecting the influence of body fat on “kilogram body mass” in the denominator. However, VAT as percentage of VO2 max is no different from that in nonobese youth. These findings support the concept that expressions of aerobic fitness in obese subjects are depressed by the effect of fat as an inert load rather than as an indication of negative influence of excessive body fat on cardiovascular function.
RUNNING/WALKING ECONOMY The energy cost of moving body mass in weight-bearing activities is defined by exercise economy, or the VO2 per kilogram at a given treadmill speed or elevation. Determinants of economy are multifold, including muscular efficiency (work accomplished relative to energetic expenditure of muscle contraction), stride length and frequency, and gait coordination. Most studies have indicated little or no difference in exercise economy in obese compared with nonobese subjects [4,26,27]. For instance, when comparing submaximal treadmill energy expenditure at 67 m/min (2.5 mph) 0% grade in 7- to 10-year-old obese and nonobese girls, Treuth et al. [26]
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found values of 16.6 ± 2.5 and 14.7 ± 2.6 ml kg1 min1, respectively. These findings indicate that any differences in gait kinematics or muscular efficiency that might occur in obese subjects are not of sufficient magnitude to significantly alter the energy cost of submaximal treadmill exercise.
EXERCISE TESTING In a recent review, Owens and Gutin [23] indicated that limited information is available regarding peak exercise test protocols for obese children and youth. Investigators have typically employed exercise protocols at less strenuous treadmill speeds/inclines or cycle power outputs than protocols implemented for apparently healthy, normal-weight youth [6,7,28]. The excess adiposity presents added burden to movement, in particular, movement where the individual supports his or her own mass, such as walking or running. Loftin et al. [7] employed a walking treadmill test for the obese participants, as they were not able to tolerate a running test. Treadmill speed ranged from 67 m/min to 94 m/min (2.5 to 3.5 mph), with elevation increased by 2% every 2 minutes until volitional termination [7]. During cycle ergometry, Sothern et al. [28] employed a protocol that set the initial power output at 29 W and increased by 29 W every 2 minutes until 118 W. Power output was increased by 15 W for each additional workload. Maffeis [6] employed a similar protocol (25 W initial power output), with 15-W increments every 6 minutes. Typically, protocols for normal-weight youth have been more strenuous. For example, treadmill protocols have been either walking or running at various inclines. Boileau et al. [29] used a walking protocol at 94 m/min (3.5 mph) that began at 10% incline. Each 3 minutes thereafter, the incline was increased by 2.5% until volitional termination. Turley et al. [30] used a protocol that included both walking and running (80 m/min to 134 m/min) with incline increased from level walking to 5% while running. Boileau et al. [29] used a peak cycle ergometer protocol that had the youth exercising at an initial workload of 88W with increases of 29W every three minutes until volitional termination. Turley et al. [30] used a protocol that began at zero resistance (65 rpm) and increased by 16 W every minute until volitional termination. In comparing treadmill with cycle peak VO2 values, Loftin et al. [31] found no significant differences for either absolute VO2 (L/min) or VO2 peak relative to mass. The authors speculated that the excess adiposity in the severely obese participants may have limited their performance during the treadmill peak test as they had to support their mass during this test. Typically, treadmill VO2 peak has yielded higher values than peak cycle ergometry in normal-weight youth. In summary, less strenuous peak treadmill and cycle ergometry protocols are typically used for obese youth when compared with apparently healthy, normal-weight youth. Either ergometer yields peak responses.
REFERENCES 1. Cumming, G. R., D. Everatt, and L. Hastman. Bruce treadmill test in children: normal values in a clinic population. Am J Cardiol. 41:69–75, 1978. 2. Rowland, T., G. Kline, D. Goff, L. Martel, and L. Ferrone. One-mile run performance and cardiovascular fitness in children. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 153:845–849, 1999. 3. Watson, A. W. Quantification of the influence of body fat content on selected physical performance variables in adolescent boys. Ir J Med Sci. 157:383–384, 1988. 4. Rowland, T. W. Effects of obesity on aerobic fitness in adolescent females. Am J Dis Child. 145:764–768, 1991. 5. Rowland, T., R. Bhargava, D. Parslow, and R. A. Heptulla. Cardiac response to progressive cycle exercise in moderately obese adolescent females. J Adolesc Health. 32:422–427, 2003. 6. Maffeis, C., F. Schena, M. Zaffanello, L. Zoccante, Y. Schutz, and L. Pinelli. Maximal aerobic power during running and cycling in obese and non-obese children. Acta Paediatr. 83:113–116, 1994.
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7. Loftin, M., M. Sothern, L. Trosclair, A. O’Hanlon, J. Miller, and J. Udall. Scaling VO(2) peak in obese and non-obese girls. Obes Res. 9:290–296, 2001. 8. Daniels, S. R., T. R. Kimball, J. A. Morrison, P. Khoury, S. Witt, and R. A. Meyer. Effect of lean body mass, fat mass, blood pressure, and sexual maturation on left ventricular mass in children and adolescents. Statistical, biological, and clinical significance. Circulation. 92:3249–3254, 1995. 9. Peterson, H. R., M. Rothschild, C. R. Weinberg, R. D. Fell, K. R. McLeish, and M. A. Pfeifer. Body fat and the activity of the autonomic nervous system. N Engl J Med. 318:1077–1083, 1988. 10. Laederach-Hofmann, K., L. Mussgay, and H. Ruddel. Autonomic cardiovascular regulation in obesity. J Endocrinol. 164:59–66, 2000. 11. Arone, L. J., R. Mackintosh, M. Rosenbaum, R. L. Leibel, and J. Hirsch. Autonomic nervous system activity in weight gain and weight loss. Am J Physiol. 269:R222–R225, 1995. 12. Zahorska-Markiewicz, B., E. Kuagowska, C. Kucio, and M. Klin. Heart rate variability in obesity. Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord. 17:21–23, 1993. 13. Valensi, P., B. N. Thi, B. Lormeau, J. Paries, and J. R. Attali. Cardiac autonomic function in obese patients. Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord. 19:113–118, 1995. 14. Gutin, B., P. Barbeau, M. S. Litaker, M. Ferguson, and S. Owens. Heart rate variability in obese children: relations to total body and visceral adiposity, and changes with physical training and detraining. Obes Res. 8:12–19, 2000. 15. Yakinci, C., B. Mungen, H. Karabiber, M. Tayfun, and C. Evereklioglu. Autonomic nervous system functions in obese children. Brain Dev. 22:151–153, 2000. 16. Tulio, S., S. Egle, and B. Greily. Blood pressure response to exercise of obese and lean hypertensive and normotensive male adolescents. J Hum Hypertens. 9:953–958, 1995. 17. Loftin, M., M. Sothern, C. VanVrancken, A. O’Hanlon, and J. Udall. Effect of obesity status on heart rate peak in female youth. Clin Pediatr (Phila). 42:505–510, 2003. 18. Salvadori, A., P. Fanari, P. Mazza, S. Baudo, A. Brunani, M. De Martin et al. Metabolic aspects and sympathetic effects in the obese subject undergoing exercise testing. Minerva Med. 84:171–177, 1993. 19. Salvadori, A., M. Arreghini, G. Bolla, P. Fanari, E. Giacomotti, E. Longhini et al. Cardiovascular and adrenergic response to exercise in obese subjects. J Clin Basic Cardiol. 2:229–236, 1999. 20. Gustafson, A. B., P. A. Farrell, and R. K. Kalkhoff. Impaired plasma catecholamine response to submaximal treadmill exercise in obese women. Metabolism. 39:410–417, 1990. 21. Lauer, R. M., W. E. Connor, P. E. Leaverton, M. A. Reiter, and W. R. Clarke. Coronary heart disease risk factors in school children: the Muscatine Study. J Pediatr. 86:697–706, 1975. 22. Gutin, B., S. Islam, F. Treiber, C. Smith, and T. Manos. Fasting insulin concentration is related to cardiovascular reactivity to exercise in children. Pediatrics. 96:1123–1125, 1995. 23. Owens, S. and B. Gutin. Exercise testing of the child with obesity. Pediatr Cardiol. 20:79–83, 1999; discussion 84. 24. Reybrouck, T., M. Weymans, J. Vinckx, H. Stijns, and M. Vanderschueren-Lodeweyckx. Cardiorespiratory function during exercise in obese children. Acta Paediatr Scand. 76:342–348, 1987. 25. Zanconato, S., E. Baraldi, P. Santuz, F. Rigon, L. Vido, L. Da Dalt, and F. Zacchello. Gas exchange during exercise in obese children. Eur J Pediatr. 148:614–617, 1989. 26. Treuth, M. S., R. Figueroa-Colon, G. R. Hunter, R. L. Weinsier, N. F. Butte, and M. I. Goran. Energy expenditure and physical fitness in overweight vs non-overweight prepubertal girls. Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord. 22:440–447, 1998. 27. Katch, V., M. D. Becque, C. Marks, C. Moorehead, and A. Rocchini. Oxygen uptake and energy output during walking of obese male and female adolescents. Am J Clin Nutr. 47:26–32, 1988. 28. Sothern, M. S., M. Loftin, U. Blecker, and J. N. Udall, Jr. Impact of significant weight loss on maximal oxygen uptake in obese children and adolescents. J Investig Med. 48:411–416, 2000. 29. Boileau, R. A., A. Bonen, V. H. Heyward, and B. H. Massey. Maximal aerobic capacity on the treadmill and bicycle ergometer of boys 11-14 years of age. J Sports Med Phys Fitness. 17:153–162, 1977. 30. Turley, K. R., Rogers, D.M., Harper, K.M., Kujawa, K.I., Wilmore, J.H. Maximal treadmill versus cycle ergometry testing in children: differences, reliability, and variability of responses. Pediatr Exerc Sci. 7:49–60, 1995. 31. Loftin, M., Sothern, M., Warren, B., Udall, J. Comparison of VO2 peak during treadmill and cycle ergometry in severely overweight youth. J Sports Sci Med. 3:254–260, 2004.
Section 5 Dietary Approaches
Obesity Dietary 11 Pediatric Approaches in Clinical Settings: A Survey of the Options and Recommendations Melinda S. Sothern, Connie VanVrancken-Tompkins, and Lauren Keely Carlisle CONTENTS Introduction ....................................................................................................................................121 Individual- and Family-Based Dietary Interventions in Clinical Settings....................................122 Dietary Prevention and Treatment Recommendations for Children and Adolescents .................124 Normal and Overweight Children 6 or Fewer Years of Age with Parental Obesity ..........124 At Risk for Overweight Children and Adolescents, 7 to 18 Years of Age .........................125 Overweight Children and Adolescents, 7 to 18 Years of Age.............................................126 Severely Overweight Children and Adolescents, 7 to 18 Years of Age..............................126 Low-Glycemic Index Diet .............................................................................................................126 Very Low Calorie Diets in the Clinical Setting ............................................................................127 Summary ........................................................................................................................................128 References ......................................................................................................................................129
INTRODUCTION The clinical management of pediatric obesity requires the application of scientifically sound and medically relevant dietary approaches. The most successful approaches are implemented in conjunction with behavioral counseling, including the promotion of physical activity and medical supervision [1]. The child’s medical history and current weight condition during critical periods of obesity development may help to define the appropriate dietary approach and optimal weight loss schedule or maintenance plan (Table 11.1). These critical periods include birth, 4 to 6 years of age, and adolescence [2]. Although successful weight loss is rare in overweight adults, research indicates that weight loss during childhood can be maintained into adulthood [3]. However, few studies have reported success in treating more severe conditions of childhood and adolescent obesity. The most successful dietary approaches are those that the patient will most likely follow with a high level of compliance. Dietary plans should include a combination of nutrients and daily calorie levels that best promotes the optimal schedule of weight loss or maintenance associated with the patient’s medical history, current weight condition, and age. Younger, less overweight children 121
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TABLE 11.1 Critical Opportunities for Dietary Intervention Normal and overweight children ≤6 years of age, with parental obesity At risk for overweight (>85th percentile BMI) children and adolescents, 7–18 years Overweight (>95th percentile BMI) children and adolescents, 7–18 years Severely overweight (>97th percentile BMI) children and adolescents, 7–18 years
probably require less structure and more family education. Older, more severely overweight children may need comprehensive, aggressive therapy that promotes significant weight loss. Furthermore, increasing levels of obesity decrease exercise performance in some children [4]. This decreased ability makes it more difficult to encourage increased physical activity [5]. Increasing physical activity especially during caloric restriction is absolutely necessary to prevent adult obesity and promote normal muscle and bone development. Therefore, in children with more severe overweight conditions, aggressive dietary therapy may be required initially. In all cases, a pediatrician or family physician must supervise the dietary plan and monitor the child’s growth and development. In this chapter, we review studies of pediatric overweight treatment over the last two decades and then present varied dietary approaches to the management of pediatric obesity in clinical settings. Finally, we provide recommendations with consideration for medical history, age, and level of obesity.
INDIVIDUAL- AND FAMILY-BASED DIETARY INTERVENTIONS IN CLINICAL SETTINGS The Committee on Nutrition of the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends family-based therapies including diet, psychosocial therapy, and exercise [6]. However, the presence of medical complications, age, and obesity level should be considered when developing prevention and treatment plans. The clinical management of pediatric obesity includes dietary strategies to prevent excessive weight gain, especially in children at high risk, and treatment diets to reduce adiposity in overweight children. Several different types of diets have been suggested for treating clinically relevant pediatric obesity. These include portion-controlled diets, with a primary focus on reducing sugar and saturated fat while increasing fruits and vegetables; low-fat, moderately low calorie diets; low-glycemic load diets; low-carbohydrate diets; very low calorie diets (VLCDs); and other, including liquid diets (Table 11.2). Research to support any one individual approach to the clinical management of pediatric obesity is limited. With few exceptions, the results of research studies
TABLE 11.2 Dietary Approaches for the Clinical Management of Pediatric Obesity Nutrition education (prevention) Portion controlled, with a focus on reducing sugar and saturated fat, while increasing fruits and vegetables Low-fat, moderately low-calorie diet Low-glycemic diet Low-carbohydrate diet Very low calorie diets: Protein sparing modified fast Protein modified fast Other: meal replacement plans
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employing these varied types of diets are confounded. The majority were conducted in familybased, multidisciplinary settings, in which diets were examined in conjunction with other therapies such as behavioral counseling and exercise. Thus, studies that examine specific dietary approaches independently in overweight children and adolescents are urgently needed. Until such studies are conducted, pediatric health care professionals must refer to studies that use dietary approaches in conjunction with behavioral counseling and exercise to determine appropriate dietary interventions for their overweight patients. Recently, Crawford and others conducted a systematic, evidence-based review of the pediatric overweight treatment literature over the last two decades [7]. Studies were included if they were conducted after 1980 and before 2002. Over 100 studies were evaluated, and in this chapter we focus on studies that include nutrition education or dietary therapy based on the following criteria: targeted subjects were greater than the 85th percentile body mass index (BMI), study was conducted in a clinical setting, study included at least 15 subjects per group (if randomized controlled trials (RCT), a total of 15 subjects was acceptable), the intervention duration was greater than 8 weeks, the study included a dietary intervention, and the study included a measure of weight loss or adiposity. Interventions reviewed included 42 family-based interventions, one individual-based intervention [8], and one individual- versus family-based intervention [9–11]. Individual-based interventions were defined as those that involved one-on-one counseling only, and family-based interventions involved group counseling, with family participation within at least one intervention group. All individual- and family-based interventions involved treatment of overweight youth rather than prevention of excessive weight gain in nonoverweight individuals. Of the 44 studies evaluated, 29 were RCTs, and 15 were studies of other designs. One study by Epstein [12] duplicated a later report [13], and therefore the two reports were combined and treated as one intervention. One metaanalysis, by LeMura and Maziekas [14], was reviewed but was not included in the final report because of differing study exclusion criteria. No studies examined dietary counseling exclusively, and only one study examined nutrition education without dietary counseling. Thirty-eight studies examined dietary counseling in conjunction with behavior modification and counseling or physical activity and exercise that resulted in significant reductions in weight status and adiposity. Of these, 24 studies were randomized controlled trials, and 14 were studies of other design [15–20]. In the majority of these studies, both shortand long-term reductions in weight status/adiposity in children and adolescents were significant. Most of the studies used techniques such as portion control and recommendations to reduce access to higher-density foods. Many studies used the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s Food Guide Pyramid for prescribing a low-fat diet. The pyramid conveys messages about eating a variety of grains, fruits, and vegetables and limiting fat intake to 30% or less of total calories. Although the pyramid has been widely recommended for promoting healthful eating among children in general [21–24], there are no randomized and controlled studies comparing its direct use as an intervention with other dietary approaches in children and adolescents. Furthermore, the educational benefits of the food guide pyramid remain understudied and inconclusive [25]. A recent study concluded that promoting a diet with a variety of foods, such as the food guide pyramid does, increases the probability of nutrient adequacy in adults [26]. However, no such studies have been conducted in children. Eight studies [5,27–33] prescribed balanced hypocaloric diets with a 300- to 500-calorie-perday reduction based on current American Diabetes Association (ADA) age-appropriate standards. Two studies examined dietary counseling alone versus dietary counseling and nutrition education combined with physical activity (lifestyle exercise) or structured exercise with mixed findings. Epstein et al. [34] examined the effect of diet plus lifestyle exercise versus diet only and waiting list control over 6 months. Both treatment groups had significant reductions in weight status and adiposity compared with controls. However, there were no significant differences in the reduction of weight status and adiposity between diet only and diet plus exercise groups at 6 months or at 12-month follow up. In contrast, in a subsequent study, Epstein et al. [35] showed that interventions
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with diet plus structured exercise resulted in a significantly greater reduction in weight status/adiposity than those with diet alone at 6 months and at 1-year follow up. Two randomized controlled studies [18,19] and seven nonrandomized, clinical observational studies [5,20,28–33] evaluated reduced-calorie diets with different nutrient compositions (alternative approaches). In all of the studies, significant reductions were observed in weight status/adiposity from baseline. When alternative approaches were compared with standard diets in two randomized controlled trials [18,19], a significantly greater change in weight status was seen in the subjects receiving the alternative diet. However, none of the studies was greater than 1 year in duration. Thus, the long-term effect of such diets is not known. More RCTs, are needed to confirm these results. Research over the last 2 decades indicates that there is sufficient evidence to support familybased, group dietary counseling in conjunction with exercise or physical activity and behavior modification in children 12 year of age and under. Individual- and family-based studies contain several common elements. Most studies use a combination of dietary counseling, nutrition education, exercise/physical activity, and behavioral counseling. Because dietary recommendations vary from one study to another, it is not possible at this time to conclude that any one particular type of diet is more effective for the treatment of pediatric obesity. Long-term interventions designed for diverse populations are lacking; most of the long-term studies were conducted in white, middle-upper class youth. Long-term studies in older children are also lacking. At present, there is little information concerning the optimal overweight treatment program for adolescents 13 years or older in clinical settings. There is a need for tailored, developmentally appropriate overweight treatment programs for adolescents. With regard to this age group, there is little consensus as to what constitutes an effective approach.
DIETARY PREVENTION AND TREATMENT RECOMMENDATIONS FOR CHILDREN AND ADOLESCENTS NORMAL AND OVERWEIGHT CHILDREN 6 WITH PARENTAL OBESITY
OR
FEWER YEARS
OF
AGE
Because both normal and overweight children who are 6 or fewer years of age, with obese parents, are at increased risk for adult obesity, researchers recommend programs that combine nutrition education and parent training. Parents are encouraged to create a healthy home food environment [36]. They are advised to limit the quantities of high-calorie snacks, especially those with excessive sugar and saturated fat, in the home and to promote fruit and vegetable consumption. Parents are also encouraged to observe their child’s behavior for important cues such as excessive hunger, inability to become satiated, or excessive shyness or isolation, and to report this behavior to their child’s pediatrician or family physician [37]. Clinical management of these at-risk children has not been systemic. Moreover, there are no studies in the literature that specifically target young, healthy-weight children with primary risk factors for developing obesity in a clinical setting [38,39]. A recent publication of the American Academy of Pediatrics offers pediatric obesity prevention guidelines for medical professionals, which include increased monitoring of at-risk children and parent education [6]. Parents are advised to implement strategies such as avoiding snacking, replacing high-sugar beverages with water, and regulating meal times, which are examples of simple measures to reduce the risk of obesity in young children [37,40–42] The potential role of prevention through primary care is currently underrated by the medical community [43]. In one study, it was concluded that frequent medical clinic visits in preschool-aged children might reduce the degree of obesity in the patients [44]. Furthermore, targeting families of susceptible children with nutrition and lifestyle behavior education may create an added benefit to the other family members [43]. By the time children enter kindergarten, their food preferences and the social context with which they associate foods are already established [45]. Infants whose parents were instructed in health education emphasizing
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TABLE 11.3 Proposed Initial Dietary Strategies by Medical History, Age, and Level of Obesity Level
Medical History, Age and Weight Condition (BMI %)
I
≤6 years, normal or overweight with one or more obese parents
II
7–18 years, at risk for overweight (>85th percentile BMI)
III
7–18 years, overweight (>95th percentile BMI)
IV
7–18 years, severely overweight (>97th percentile BMI)
Dietary Approach Family nutrition education and parent training emphasizing appropriate food portions, reduced sugar and saturated fat, increased fruits and vegetables, and recommended dairy and fiber intake Family nutrition education and parent training in combination with portion control methods or balanced calorie meal plans emphasizing appropriate food portions, reduced sugar and saturated fat, increased fruits and vegetables, and recommended dairy and fiber intake Family nutrition education and parent training in combination with balanced hypocaloric diets emphasizing appropriate food portions, reduced sugar and saturated fat, increased fruits and vegetables, recommended dairy and fiber intake, and Low Glycemic Index Diet Family nutrition education and parent training in combination with dietary approaches as follows: Low Glycemic Index Diet, Atkins Diet, protein modified fast diet followed by balanced hypocaloric diet
diets low in saturated fat and sugar were less likely to be obese at 3 years of age than were agematched controls [46]. Therefore, educating the families of young children about nutrition may have a powerful, positive effect on the obesity risk of those children, and especially on those with obese parents (Table 11.3) [36,37]. Recently Passehl and others [47] implemented a clinical pediatric obesity prevention program called “Take Charge,” an on-site training program for primary health care providers (Appendix A3.1.2). Six health care provider sites pilot tested the curriculum. Results indicated that over onethird of providers used the materials with their patients daily or weekly. However, individual patient results were not available. Although it is generally recommended as a method of preventing pediatric obesity, the effects of including a nutrition curriculum to prevent pediatric obesity in at-risk preschool youth in the clinical setting remain unclear.
AT RISK
FOR
OVERWEIGHT CHILDREN
AND
ADOLESCENTS, 7
TO
18 YEARS
OF
AGE
Children, 7 years or older, who are classified as at risk for overweight are more likely to become overweight adults [48]. The risk is higher in adolescents [49]. Several dietary approaches based on portion control or balanced-calorie healthy meal plans low in saturated fat and sugar and higher in fiber have been shown to be successful [9,50,51]. The Traffic Light Diet [52] (Appendix A3.2) uses a color-coded system to promote increased consumption of healthy foods that are less nutrient dense and, therefore, lower in saturated fat and sugar and higher in fiber, and decreased intake of those foods that are less nutritious and higher in calories. In our review, we found 12 studies that prescribed the Traffic Light Diet [52]. In all cases, studies using the Traffic Light Diet demonstrated significant reductions in weight status. The dietary pattern consisted of green (go foods — unlimited), yellow (eat with caution foods — limit), and red (stop foods — avoid) (Appendix A3.2). Several studies [16,17,20,53–56] specify diets with daily caloric recommendations based on current ADA age-appropriate standards. As stated earlier, it is difficult to assess the direct effect of ADA standard diets, but when they are used in combination with behavioral counseling and exercise, weight loss results are generally significant. In addition, several of these studies use portion control techniques to reduce calorie intake by limiting the amount of food (portions) consumed by the child [32,33,55,56]. Because portion control may help to reteach the body to normalize food
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intake over a period of time, it can be routinely used in clinical settings as a method to prevent the onset of significant obesity in children.
OVERWEIGHT CHILDREN
AND
ADOLESCENTS, 7
TO
18 YEARS
OF
AGE
The overweight child presents the greatest challenge to the health care professional. Excess weight limits exercise tolerance and promotes sedentary behaviors [57]. Thus, it may be necessary to limit the daily calorie intake of an obese child to promote a noticeable weight loss. In addition, caloric restriction may be necessary if previous attempts to promote reduced fat/healthy food choices were unsuccessful. In our review, eight studies [5,27–33] prescribed hypocaloric diets with a 300 to 500 calorie per day reduction based on current ADA age-appropriate standards. All of these studies showed significant reductions in weight status or adiposity after 8 to 10 weeks. In one clinical observation [9], growth velocity delays were observed in some of the participants. However, none of the randomized and controlled trials using hypocaloric diets showed growth abnormalities. Because the risk of growth delays is possible, caloric reduction requires close medical monitoring. Therefore, reduced-calorie diets should only be prescribed and monitored by registered dietitians in conjunction with physician supervision and long-term follow-up.
SEVERELY OVERWEIGHT CHILDREN
AND
ADOLESCENTS, 7
TO
18 YEARS
OF
AGE
Research consistently supports the concept that traditional dietary approaches may not promote successful weight management in severely overweight children [58,59]. In older overweight children with a history of dietary failures, it may be necessary initially to prescribe a more restrictive diet for a short period. Typically, these children have other emotional concerns that must be addressed during dietary treatment [13,60–62]. Several alternative dietary approaches have been proposed and scientifically tested in short-term, clinical settings (Table 11.2).
LOW-GLYCEMIC INDEX DIET Changing patterns of macronutrient consumption have arguably contributed to the epidemic of obesity [63]. With an estimated 302 million adults worldwide classified as obese by the World Health Organization, high-fat diets have been viewed by many as a leading cause of this energy excess [63]. In the United States, however, there has been a substantial decline in the percentage of total energy obtained from fat [64]. Therefore, it is important to consider the effects of other dietary changes on body weight — in particular, high-glycemic index (GI) carbohydrates. Traditionally, carbohydrates were classified according to saccharide chain length, as “simple sugars” or “complex carbohydrates” [65]. In 1981, Jenkins and colleagues introduced an alternative system for characterizing carbohydrate-containing foods according to how they affect postgrandial glycemia [66]. Thus, the GI is determined by comparing the blood glucose response to ingestion of 50 g of available carbohydrate from a test food with that of a reference food (either glucose or white bread), as follows: GI =
Incremental area under the glucose response curve to 50 g carbohydrate from test foood × 1000 Incremental area under the glucose respoonse curve to 50 g carbohydrate standard
A related term, glycemic load, has been proposed to take into account differences in carbohydrate content among foods, meals, or diets [67]: Glycemic load = GI of food (meal, diet) × carbohydrate content of food (meal, diet). Thus, glycemic load facilitates application of GI to the clinical setting, where macronutrient composition differs among individuals.
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Weight loss on energy-restricted, reduced-fat diets may be increased when such diets are modified to lower GI. In an outcomes assessment study of 107 patients attending a pediatric obesity clinic, Spieth et al. [68] prescribed either an ad libitum low-glycemic load diet (45 to 50% carbohydrate, 30 to 35% fat, 20 to 25% protein) emphasizing low-GI carbohydrate sources or an energyrestricted low-fat diet (55 to 60% carbohydrate, 25 to 30% fat, 15 to 20% protein). Children in the low-glycemic load group were specifically instructed to eat to satiety and snack when hungry. Patients on the low-glycemic load diet lost more weight, resulting in a group difference of 1.5 kg/m2 for change in BMI over a mean of 4 months. Ebbeling et al. conducted a randomized and controlled study, which indicated that low-glycemic diets promote significantly greater improvements in the weight status/adiposity and metabolic profiles of sedentary, overweight adolescents when compared with a low-fat diet [18]. By 12 months, BMI had decreased more in the low-glycemic load group compared with the low-fat group (1.3 vs. +0.7 kg/m2). This ad libitum reduced-glycemic load diet, without strict limitation on carbohydrate intake, may be a promising alternative to conventional dietary therapy. The metabolic profile associated with consumption of low-GI diets may foster satiety and reduce food intake [69,70]. The decreased availability of metabolic fuels in the late postprandial period after consumption of a high-GI diet would be expected to stimulate hunger and promote food intake in an environment of food abundance [65]. Single-meal studies show GI to be directly related to postprandial hunger and subsequent voluntary food intake [69–71]. Studies have also shown that this satiety effect is likely to extend beyond the short term (one meal). In addition, soluble fiber has been shown to lower hunger ratings [72,73] and the desire to eat for as long as 13 hours after the meal [72] and to promote longer-term negative energy balance [74]. According to low-fat dietary guidelines set by the American Heart Association to prevent and treat cardiovascular disease, total fat intake should be less than 30% of the diet, with saturated fat less than 10%. Independent of weight loss and physical activity, the effectiveness of this diet on cardiovascular disease remains unclear [75–78]. It is possible that low-GI diets may modify the unfavorable risk factors caused by obesity by decreasing postprandial hyperinsulinemia [79]. Studies have demonstrated decreased blood glucose profiles and lower levels of C-peptide (a marker of insulin secretion) on nutrient-controlled low-, compared with high-, GI diets [80–83]. It was also reported that glucose tolerance improved after consuming low- versus high-GI test meals [84–87]. In addition, two of three observational studies found significant associations after controlling for body weight and other potentially confounding factors to further support a role of GI or glycemic load in diabetes risk [88,89]. There is concern that the GI concept is too complex to be practical in the clinical setting; however, several studies have reported clinically significant improvement in relevant endpoints among subjects consuming self-selected low-GI diets. In addition, in newly diagnosed diabetic adults and children, the low-GI diets facilitated better glycemic control and were perceived as “simple and practical” [90,91]. The benefits of low-GI diets in the treatment and prevention of obesity and type 2 diabetes should be considered by the clinician for dietary counsel. Ebbeling and Ludwig provide a detailed overview of the ad libitum low-glycemic load approach in Volume 1 of the Handbook of Pediatric Obesity, including lesson plans, student handouts, and study results [92].
VERY LOW CALORIE DIETS IN THE CLINICAL SETTING There have been few randomized and controlled trials using very low calorie diets (VLCDs) in children and adolescents. In a short-term study, Sondike et al. [93] reported greater reductions in weight status/adiposity (9.9 vs. 4.1 kg) in adolescents who were instructed to follow an ad libitum VLCD versus an ad libitum low-fat diet for 12 weeks. In this study, two diets were compared on their effects on weight loss and serum lipid profiles in 30 obese adolescents (BMI > 95th percentile for age) in a controlled 12-week trial. The low-carbohydrate and low-fat diets were chosen because of previous research showing that they are well-tolerated and effective treatments for short-term
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weight loss in both children and adults. The low-carbohydrate diet consisted of <20 g/day of carbohydrates for the first 2 weeks and <40 g/day for the remaining 10 weeks. The low-fat diet (control) consisted of consumption of <30% of energy from fat per day. Any additional calorie consumption was self-selected. Diet composition and weight were monitored every 2 weeks throughout the trial. Serum lipid profiles were obtained at the beginning and end of the 12-week trial period. The low-carbohydrate group lost more weight (9.9 ± 9.3 kg) compared with the low-fat diet group (4.1 ± 4.9 kg) and showed significantly better average BMI improvements (3.3 ± 3.0 kg/m2) than the low-fat group (1.5 ± 1.7 kg/m2). The low-carbohydrate group also showed improvements in non-high-density-lipoprotein cholesterol levels, as well as greater decreases in serum triglyceride values, than the low-fat group. Improvements in low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels were seen only in the low-fat group. Neither group showed adverse effects on serum lipid profiles. Total caloric intake estimates show that on average, the low-carbohydrate group consumed more energy than the low-fat group and reported higher fat and cholesterol intakes and lower carbohydrate intakes than the low-fat group. Greater weight loss despite higher caloric, fat, and cholesterol intakes in the low-carbohydrate group indicates that a low-carbohydrate diet may be more effective than a low-fat diet in promoting short-term weight loss in obese adolescents. However, the long-term effect of such approaches is unknown. Brown et al. [28] demonstrated improvements in the lipid profiles and weight status/adiposity of 53 children, 7 to 17 years of age, after a VLCD, nutrition education, structured exercise, increased physical activity, and behavior modification. In a series of three clinical observations, [29,31,33] Sothern and colleagues examined the change in weight status/adiposity in children and adolescents, 7 to 17 years of age, after participation in behavior modification, nutrition education, structured exercise, increased physical activity, and a VLCD or balanced hypocaloric diet (based on initial weight status). The multidisciplinary program included a VLCD called a protein-sparing modified fast that provided 600 to 800 kcal/day and 1.5 to 2.0 gm/kg of ideal body weight in severely obese children (BMI = 34.1 ± 4.8 and >97th percentile BMI). Subjects reduced weight approximately 30% after 10 weeks and maintained the weight loss at 1 year. In one study, however, two males and four females exhibited growth velocities below the 3rd percentile for their chronological age. In females, but not males, heights at the end of the study were normal for an adult North American individual. Regardless, in some patients this severe caloric restriction may negatively affect growth velocity, even in the presence of exercise and close medical supervision. Recently, a modified version of the protein-sparing modified fast called the protein modified fast has been suggested and observed in clinical settings [94]. It is a nonketogenic VLCD of approximately 1000 calories per day, 50 to 75 g/day of carbohydrates, and 2.5 gm/kg ideal body weight (average 90 to 140 g/day) of protein. Because this diet emphasizes the intake of low-starch vegetables, includes dairy and fruit up to 45 to 50 grams, and reduces saturated fat, it is less like a VLCD and, in concept, is a structured reduced-calorie diet that includes low-glycemic recommendations. In Chapter 12 of this text, Schumacher and colleagues detail this approach and provide preliminary findings in children 7 to 17 years of age.
SUMMARY The goal for preventing and treating childhood obesity is regulating body weight and fat with adequate nutrition for growth and development. Clinical pediatric obesity dietary interventions should be delivered by a team of health care experts in a medically supervised, nurturing, and nonintimidating environment. In children, from birth to 6 years of age, parental nutrition education is strongly recommended regardless of the child’s current weight condition, especially if the parents are obese (Table 11.3). Children and adolescents 7 years or older at risk for overweight become increasingly more susceptible as they mature. Therefore, appropriate, targeted, family-based dietary interventions are recommended to prevent the onset of a clinically significant overweight condition (Table 11.3). Children, 7 years of age or older with clinically relevant overweight conditions require
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more comprehensive, structured, and in severe cases, aggressive dietary approaches (Table 11.3). Low-GI diets have been safely and effectively used to promote weight loss in adolescents in a 1-year randomized and controlled study. The results of VLCDs in youth are limited to one shortterm randomized and controlled trial and several 1-year clinical observations. Strict medical supervision is absolutely necessary when developing children are prescribed diets low in calories. Research is needed to determine the safest and most effective dietary strategy for children and, especially, adolescents with more severe conditions of obesity under randomized and controlled conditions over long-term periods.
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46. Schonfeld-Warden, N. and C. H. Warden. Pediatric obesity. An overview of etiology and treatment. Pediatr Clin North Am. 44:339–361, 1997. 47. Passehl, B., C. McCarroll, J. Buechner, C. Gearring, A. E. Smith, and F. Trowbridge. Preventing childhood obesity: establishing healthy lifestyle habits in the preschool years. J Pediatr Health Care. 18:315–319, 2004. 48. Krebs, N., R. Baker, F. Greer, M. Heyman, T. Jaksic, F. Lifshitz et al. American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Nutrition. Prevention of pediatric overweight and obesity. Pediatrics. 112:424–430, 2003. 49. Ogden, C. L., K. M. Flegal, M. D. Carroll, and C. L. Johnson. Prevalence and trends in overweight among US children and adolescents, 1999-2000. JAMA. 288:1728–1732, 2002. 50. Epstein, L. H., A. Valoski, R. R. Wing, and J. McCurley. Ten-year outcomes of behavioral familybased treatment for childhood obesity. Health Psychol. 13:373–383, 1994. 51. Schwimmer, J. B. Managing overweight in older children and adolescents. Pediatr Ann. 33:39–44, 2004. 52. Epstein, L. H., S. J. McKenzie, A. Valoski, K. R. Klein, and R. R. Wing. Effects of mastery criteria and contingent reinforcement for family-based child weight control. Addict Behav. 19:135–145, 1994. 53. Epstein, L. H., R. Koeske, R. R. Wing, and A. Valoski. The effect of family variables on child weight change. Health Psychol. 5:1–11, 1986. 54. Epstein, L. H., A. Valoski, R. Koeske, and R. R. Wing. Family-based behavioral weight control in obese young children. J Am Diet Assoc. 86:481–484, 1986. 55. Flodmark, C. E., T. Ohlsson, O. Ryden, and T. Sveger. Prevention of progression to severe obesity in a group of obese schoolchildren treated with family therapy. Pediatrics. 91:880–884, 1993. 56. Eliakim, A., G. Kaven, I. Berger, O. Friedland, B. Wolach, and D. Nemet. The effect of a combined intervention on body mass index and fitness in obese children and adolescents — a clinical experience. Eur J Pediatr. 161:449–454, 2002. 57. Sothern, M. S. Exercise as a modality in the treatment of childhood obesity. Pediatr Clin North Am. 48:995–1015, 2001. 58. Kiess, W., A. Galler, A. Reich, G. Muller, T. Kapellen, J. Deutscher et al. Clinical aspects of obesity in childhood and adolescence. Obes Rev. 2:29–36, 2001. 59. Yanovski, J. A. and S. Z. Yanovski. Treatment of pediatric and adolescent obesity. JAMA. 289:1851–1853, 2003. 60. Eisenberg, M. E., D. Neumark-Sztainer, and M. Story. Associations of weight-based teasing and emotional well-being among adolescents. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 157:733–738, 2003. 61. Schwimmer, J. B., T. M. Burwinkle, and J. W. Varni. Health-related quality of life of severely obese children and adolescents. JAMA. 289:1813–1819, 2003. 62. Erermis, S., N. Cetin, M. Tamar, N. Bukusoglu, F. Akdeniz, and D. Goksen. Is obesity a risk factor for psychopathology among adolescents? Pediatr Int. 46:296–301, 2004. 63. Bray, G. A. and B. M. Popkin. Dietary fat intake does affect obesity! Am J Clin Nutr. 68:1157–1173, 1998. 64. Putnam, J., Allshouse, JA. Food Consumption, Prices, and Expenditures, 1970–97. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Agriculture, 1999. 65. Ludwig, D. S. The glycemic index: physiological mechanisms relating to obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease. JAMA. 287:2414–2423, 2002. 66. Jenkins, D. J., T. M. Wolever, R. H. Taylor, H. Barker, H. Fielden, J. M. Baldwin et al. Glycemic index of foods: a physiological basis for carbohydrate exchange. Am J Clin Nutr. 34:362–366, 1981. 67. Liu, S. Dietary Glycemic Load, Carbohydrate and Whole Grain Intakes in Relation to Risk of Coronary Heart Disease. Boston: Harvard University, 1998, pp. 1–121. 68. Spieth, L. E., J. D. Harnish, C. M. Lenders, L. B. Raezer, M. A. Pereira, S. J. Hangen, and D. S. Ludwig. A low glycemic index diet in the treatment of pediatric obesity. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med, 154:947–951, 2000. 69. Roberts, S. B. High-glycemic index foods, hunger, and obesity: is there a connection? Nutr Rev. 58:163–169, 2000. 70. Ludwig, D. S. Dietary glycemic index and obesity. J Nutr. 130:280S–283S, 2000. 71. Ebbeling, C. B. and D. S. Ludwig. Treating obesity in youth: should dietary glycemic load be a consideration? Adv Pediatr. 48:179–212, 2001. 72. Krotkiewski, M. Effect of guar gum on body-weight, hunger ratings and metabolism in obese subjects. Br J Nutr. 52:97–105, 1984.
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73. Rigaud, D., F. Paycha, A. Meulemans, M. Merrouche, and M. Mignon. Effect of psyllium on gastric emptying, hunger feeling and food intake in normal volunteers: a double blind study. Eur J Clin Nutr. 52:239–245, 1998. 74. Delargy, H. J., V. J. Burley, K. R. O’Sullivan, R. J. Fletcher, and J. E. Blundell. Effects of different soluble: insoluble fibre ratios at breakfast on 24-h pattern of dietary intake and satiety. Eur J Clin Nutr. 49:754–766, 1995. 75. Parks, E. J. and M. K. Hellerstein. Carbohydrate-induced hypertriacylglycerolemia: historical perspective and review of biological mechanisms. Am J Clin Nutr. 71:412–433, 2000. 76. Reaven, G. M. Do high carbohydrate diets prevent the development or attenuate the manifestations (or both) of syndrome X? A viewpoint strongly against. Curr Opin Lipidol. 8:23–27, 1997. 77. Yu-Poth, S., G. Zhao, T. Etherton, M. Naglak, S. Jonnalagadda, and P. M. Kris-Etherton. Effects of the National Cholesterol Education Program’s Step I and Step II dietary intervention programs on cardiovascular disease risk factors: a meta-analysis. Am J Clin Nutr. 69:632–646, 1999. 78. Program, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Report of the Expert Panel on Detection, Evaluation and Treatment of High Blood Cholesterol in Adults (ATP II). Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 1993. 79. Lamarche, B., A. Tchernof, P. Mauriege, B. Cantin, G. R. Dagenais, P. J. Lupien, and J. P. Despres. Fasting insulin and apolipoprotein B levels and low-density lipoprotein particle size as risk factors for ischemic heart disease. JAMA. 279:1955–1961, 1998. 80. Wolever, T. M., D. J. Jenkins, V. Vuksan, A. L. Jenkins, G. S. Wong, and R. G. Josse. Beneficial effect of low-glycemic index diet in overweight NIDDM subjects. Diabetes Care. 15:562–564, 1992. 81. Miller, J. C. Importance of glycemic index in diabetes. Am J Clin Nutr. 59:747S–752S, 1994. 82. Jenkins, D. J., T. M. Wolever, G. Buckley et al. Low-glycemic-index starchy foods in the diabetic diet. Am J Clin Nutr. 48:248–254, 1988. 83. Jenkins, D. J., T. M. Wolever, G. R. Collier, A. Ocana, A. V. Rao, G. Buckley, Y et al. Metabolic effects of a low-glycemic-index diet. Am J Clin Nutr. 46:968–975, 1987. 84. Liljeberg, H. G., A. K. Akerberg, and I. M. Bjorck. Effect of the glycemic index and content of indigestible carbohydrates of cereal-based breakfast meals on glucose tolerance at lunch in healthy subjects. Am J Clin Nutr. 69:647–655, 1999. 85. Jenkins, D. J., T. M. Wolever, R. H. Taylor, C. Griffiths, K. Krzeminska, J. A. Lawrie et al. Slow release dietary carbohydrate improves second meal tolerance. Am J Clin Nutr. 35:1339–1346, 1982. 86. Jenkins, D. J., T. M. Wolever, R. Nineham, D. L. Sarson, S. R. Bloom, J. Ahern et al. Improved glucose tolerance four hours after taking guar with glucose. Diabetologia. 19:21–24, 1980. 87. Wolever, T. M., D. J. Jenkins, A. M. Ocana, V. A. Rao, and G. R. Collier. Second-meal effect: lowglycemic-index foods eaten at dinner improve subsequent breakfast glycemic response. Am J Clin Nutr. 48:1041–1047, 1988. 88. Salmeron, J., A. Ascherio, E. B. Rimm, G. A. Colditz, D. Spiegelman, D. J. Jenkins et al. Dietary fiber, glycemic load, and risk of NIDDM in men. Diabetes Care. 20:545–550, 1997. 89. Salmeron, J., J. E. Manson, M. J. Stampfer, G. A. Colditz, A. L. Wing, and W. C. Willett. Dietary fiber, glycemic load, and risk of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in women. JAMA. 277:472–477, 1997. 90. Frost, G., J. Wilding, and J. Beecham. Dietary advice based on the glycaemic index improves dietary profile and metabolic control in type 2 diabetic patients. Diabet Med. 11:397–401, 1994. 91. Gilbertson, H. R., J. C. Brand-Miller, A. W. Thorburn, S. Evans, P. Chondros, and G. A. Werther. The effect of flexible low glycemic index dietary advice versus measured carbohydrate exchange diets on glycemic control in children with type 1 diabetes. Diabetes Care. 24:1137–1143, 2001. 92. Ebbeling, C. B. and D L. Ludwig. Dietary approaches for obesity treatment and prevention in children and adolescents. In: M. Goran MI and V. L. Sothern. Eds. Handbook of Pediatric Obesity: Epidemiology, Etiology and Prevention. New York: Taylor & Francis, 2006. 93. Sondike, S. B., N. Copperman, and M. S. Jacobson. Effects of a low-carbohydrate diet on weight loss and cardiovascular risk factors in overweight adolescents. J Pediatr. 142:253–258, 2003. 94. Sothern, M., C. VanVrancken, H. Schumacher, L. Carlisle, S. Gordon, J. Reed et al. A controlled comparison of high protein, low carbohydrate diets with different daily calories levels in severely obese children. Obesity Res. 9:204S, 2001.
12 Nutrition Education Heidi Schumacher, Connie VanVrancken-Tompkins, and Melinda S. Sothern CONTENTS Introduction ....................................................................................................................................133 Nutrition Education and Individual Counseling............................................................................133 Nutrition Education and Group Counseling..................................................................................134 Nutrition Education in Multidisciplinary Settings ........................................................................134 Nutrition Education and Alternative Dietary Approaches.............................................................136 A Sample Nutrition Education Curriculum in the Clinical Setting..............................................138 Diet Instruction.....................................................................................................................138 Food Labs: The Meat and Protein Group............................................................................139 Cooking Demonstrations: Fun in the Kitchen — Low-Calorie Pizza ................................139 Nutrition Games: Snack-Food Jeopardy ..............................................................................139 Class Discussion: Calcium: The Bone-Builder ...................................................................140 Summary ........................................................................................................................................141 References ......................................................................................................................................143
INTRODUCTION Nutrition education is the cornerstone of the management of several chronic diseases in children, including diabetes mellitus and hyperlipidemia. However, its application in the clinical management of pediatric obesity is unclear. Moreover, systematic evaluation of the effect of including nutrition education in pediatric obesity prevention and treatment is unavailable.
NUTRITION EDUCATION AND INDIVIDUAL COUNSELING Over the last two decades only one study has been published that evaluated individual nutrition education counseling alone. Saelens et al. [1] implemented a weight management program in 44 overweight 12 to 16 year olds that included nutrition education based on the Traffic Light Diet [2]. The subjects participated in an intervention called Healthy Habits, which included use of a computer program designed for normal and overweight adolescents. The computer program provided individualized plans after assessing each subjects’ eating, physical activity, and sedentary behavior. Action plans were then printed for each individual that identified strategies for increasing fruit and vegetable intake and decreasing overeating and snacking. The subjects then reviewed the action plan with a pediatrician to discuss and finalize their programs. After this visit, the subjects met with the pediatrician to discuss food self-monitoring and the upcoming mail and phone contact obligations. Subjects were counseled weekly by phone for the first 8 weeks and then biweekly for the last three or four calls, for a total of 14 to 16 weeks. Subjects received nutritional and behavioral counseling over the phone in addition to a participant manual designed to help them acquire various behavioral skills for weight control. They were instructed by the food counselors to reduce food quantity while being encouraged to eat healthier. The subjects were also given self-monitoring booklets and encouraged 133
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to monitor all food and beverage intake. The foods were then categorized as a green, red, or nocolor food similar to the Traffic Light Diet [2]. Green foods included foods with less than 1 gram of fat per serving, with fewer than 150 calories per serving, and that provided a good source of one or more dietary components such as calcium, fiber, or protein. The red foods consisted of foods having 5 g or more of fat per serving. The goal of the diet was to consume 40 green food servings and fewer than 15 red food servings per week. Parents were provided with information sheets that directed them on ways to help promote and encourage their child’s behavior changes. At the end of the intervention period, a significant decrease was observed in the subjects’ body mass index (BMI) z-score.
NUTRITION EDUCATION AND GROUP COUNSELING There has been only one study in the last 20 years that examined nutrition education alone without dietary counseling [3]. Kirschenbaum and Rosenberg [3] recruited overweight children along with one overweight parent for a weight-reduction program. The children ranged in age from 9 to 13 years and were at least 20% overweight relative to norms for height, age, and sex. Parents were at least 10% overweight relative to ideal weights. The program participants were randomly assigned to one of three groups. The first group included a cognitive behavioral program and was comprised of the parent plus the child. The second group included the cognitive behavioral program as well but consisted of the child only. The third group was a waiting list control group in which the children agreed to participate in the assessments with the guarantee that they would be placed in the next treatment program. The cognitive behavioral sessions consisted of nine weekly, 90-minute sessions at which the subjects were provided detailed written lessons and homework assignments. The homework and lessons consisted of self-monitoring food intake, documenting exercise, stimulus control, self-reward, and decelerated eating. In the parent-plus-child group, both attended these sessions together. In the child-only group, the child was alone at the sessions and was responsible for submitting his or her parent’s homework assignments. Significant weight decreases were observed at 3 months in both of the treatment groups, and significant weight increases were observed in the control group.
NUTRITION EDUCATION IN MULTIDISCIPLINARY SETTINGS Twenty-nine studies evaluated an intervention of nutrition education in conjunction with dietary counseling, exercise or physical activity, and behavioral counseling. Twenty of these 29 studies were randomized and controlled trials, and all but five studies [2,4–7] provided evidence-based results. In the Dietary Intervention Study in Children (DISC) study [8] and a study by Obarzanek et al. [9], researchers implemented a diet intervention that was similar to the National Cholesterol Education Program Step 2 diet. Both studies included over six hundred 7 to 9 year olds. The DISC diet consisted of 28% of energy from total fat, less than 8% from saturated fat, up to 9% from polyunsaturated fat, and less than 75 mg/4200 kJ (1000 kcal) per day of cholesterol (not to exceed 150 mg/day). Although overall dietary total fat, saturated fat, and cholesterol decreased significantly in the subjects, there were no significant changes in the subject’s BMI at the end of the study. Epstein et al. implemented the Traffic Light Diet in both children and their families in 11 studies over the course of 16 years [10–18]. The Traffic Light Diet developed by Epstein et al. is a diet that classifies foods in the Food Guide Pyramid according to their fat and sugar contents. The foods are labeled as green, “go,” yellow, “caution,” and red, “stop.” Foods with 0 to 1.9 g fat per serving are categorized as green, 2.0 to 4.9 g fat as yellow, and 5 g fat or more as red. The focus of the diet is to reduce calorie consumption by promoting the green foods and decreasing the intake of the red foods. The energy target ranged from 4200 to 6300 kJ per day and was adjusted according to the subjects weight change. The subjects were provided targets not to exceed a certain number of red foods per week. Typically, students reduced weight status significantly in these studies. Mellin et al. [19] implemented the SHAPEDOWN program in 66 subjects aged 12 to 18 years. The SHAPEDOWN program consists of a variety of cognitive and behavioral techniques, including
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a self-directed change format. The program encourages adolescents to make sustainable, small diet modifications, while the parents are instructed on strategies to help facilitate their child’s weight loss efforts. At 3 and 15 months, the subjects displayed a significant decrease in relative body weight (actual weight divided by expected weight, multiplied by 100). Rescinow et al. [20] implemented a nutrition and activity intervention in 11- to 17-year-old inner-city female adolescents biweekly for 4 months, and then weekly for the last 2 months of the program, for a total of 6 months. The goal of the nutrition education was to increase fruit and vegetable intake and decrease fat and fast food intake. The subjects were instructed in satiety awareness, portion control, reading food labels, and healthy grocery shopping. The subjects also participated in hands-on cooking sessions and easy-to-prepare food sessions and were given new foods to taste. Subjects completed food frequency and 24-hour dietary food recall questionnaires and from there developed a list of target foods on which they focused their behavior change efforts. Subjects were asked to complete a take-home assignment involving the nutrition education just learned or involving food or physical activity goals. Although a decrease in total kilocalories was observed in high-attending subjects (attended at least 50% of the sessions), there was no significant difference in body weight or BMI. Eliakim et al. [21] implemented a dietary–behavioral–exercise intervention in 177 obese youth, ages 6 to 16 years. The primary intervention was for 3 months; however, 65 of the 177 subjects continued in the multidisciplinary program for an additional 3 months, for a total of 6 months. Each subject met with a dietician on a monthly basis to receive various nutrition education (food labels, food preparation, eating habits) in addition to receiving handouts with other diet and nutrition information. Subjects received either a balanced diet that consisted of 1200 to 2000 kcal per day, depending on the individual’s age and weight, or a caloric deficit of approximately 30% of the reported intake, or 15% less of the estimated daily required intake. Following both the 3- and 6-month interventions, there was a significant decrease in both weight and BMI. The purpose of a study by Nuutinen and Knip [22] was to examine the characteristics of successful and unsuccessful weight losers in obese children ages 6 to 15 years. Forty-eight children participated in a 2-year weight reduction program. The children received treatment the first year and were observed for the second. Sixteen received individual counseling, sixteen received group therapy, and the other sixteen were treated in a school heath care setting. The individual treatment consisted of physician check-ups once per month for the first year in addition to five meetings with a nutritionist for dietary counseling. Dietary counseling entailed reducing fat and sugar intake, increasing fruit and vegetable intake, and individual meal plans. The children in the group setting received monthly check-ups as well with the physician for the first year and participated in a group behavior modification session with a psychiatrist seven times in the first year. The nutritionist participated in the group sessions with the psychiatrist every other time. The nutritionist provided similar dietary counseling to the group as the individual dietary counseling. The children who were treated in the school health care setting met with the school nurse once per month for approximately 20 to 40 minutes during the first year. The nurse tried to encourage the child to identify his or her dietary problems and provide a solution for those problems. Only half of the children kept food records, and only a quarter received a meal plan. The school nurse provided a treatment program tailored to what each child felt that he or she could handle. Of the 45 children who completed the study, 21 were found to be successful weight losers (1.5 standard deviation score at 1 year and 1.7 standard deviation score at 2 years). Twenty-four children were unsuccessful weight losers, with a 0.2 standard deviation score decrease after year 1 and a return to baseline at the end of the 2 years. Of the 21 successful weight losers, 11 subjects were in the individual treatment group, 6 were in the group behavior-modification group, and 4 were in the school health care treatment. The Committed to Kids program uses portion control techniques to reduce calorie intake by limiting the amount of food (portions) consumed by the child. Portion guidelines for each nutrient, which are provided by the American Dietetic Association, are used to reteach the children to normalize food intake over a period of time (Table 12.1). Once a desired calorie level for weight
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TABLE 12.1 Nutrition Plan Portion Control Chart Daily Weight Loss, Calorie Level (Approx.)a
Starch
Fruit
1200 1500 1800 2000
3-4 5-6 7-8 9
2 2-3 2-3 2-3
a
Milk/Dairy
Total (Starch/Fruit/Milk) Daily Carbohydrate Units
Total Daily Meat and ProteinSubstitute Units
Total Daily Fat Units
Vegetable Group — LowerCarbohydrate Units
3 3 3 3
8 10 12 14
4–5 6 6 6–8
4 5 6 7
Unlimited Unlimited Unlimited Unlimited
Carbohydrate Food Units (OK to mix and match)
Try to include at least 2 to 3 servings of vegetables per day.
Source: Sothern et al. Trim Kids, New York: Harper Collins, 2001.
TABLE 12.2 Daily Energy Needs and Average Calorie Requirements Age, years 7–10 (male and female) 11–14 (male) 11–14 (female) 15–18 (male) 15–18 (female)
Average Daily Calorie Needs
Average Calories Needed to Reduce Weight
1600–2200 2200–2800 1600–2400 2400–3400 1800–2400
1200–1600 1500–2000 1200–1800 1800–2400 1200–1800
Source: Sothern et al. Trim Kids, New York: Harper Collins, 2001.
management is established, these guidelines can be used to assist with prescribing appropriate nutrient portions (see Appendix A3.6 for full meal plans). The average calories recommended to normalize intake through the use of portion control strategies are listed in Table 12.2. The recommended calorie reductions for children who are already overweight are also provided in Table 12.2.
NUTRITION EDUCATION AND ALTERNATIVE DIETARY APPROACHES Two randomized controlled studies [23,24] and seven non-randomized, clinical observational studies [4–6,25–28] evaluated reduced-calorie diets with different nutrient compositions (alternative approaches). In all of the studies, significant reductions were observed in weight status/adiposity from baseline. Spieth et al. [6] examined the effects of a low-glycemic diet in 107 children (mean age about 10 years) attending the Optimal Weight for Life Program. Subjects were instructed on either a low-glycemic diet or a standard reduced-fat diet. The standard reduced-fat diet followed U.S. Department of Agriculture recommendations as depicted by the Food Guide Pyramid. A special emphasis was placed on limiting intake of high-fat, high-sugar, and energy-dense foods and promoting the intake of grain products, vegetables, and fruit. Recommendations were customized for the subject to incorporate an energy restriction of approximately 1042 to 2084 kJ (250 to 500 kcal) per day compared with usual energy intake. Specific macronutrient goals included 55 to 60% carbohydrate, 15 to 20% protein, and 25 to 30% fat. The goal of the low-glycemic diet was to obtain the lowest glycemic response possible while providing adequate dietary carbohydrates and
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satisfying all nutritional recommendations for children. The researchers employed a “Low-GI Pyramid” modeled after the Food Guide Pyramid. The Low-GI pyramid placed a primary emphasis on vegetables, legumes, and fruits; a secondary emphasis on lean proteins and dairy products; a third on whole-grain products; and limited the refined-grain products, potatoes, and concentrated sugars. The low-glycemic diet recommendations included macronutrient goals of 45 to 50% carbohydrate, 20 to 25% protein, and 30 to 35% fat. The results demonstrated a significant difference in BMI in the low-GI group compared with that of the reduced-fat group. Details of the Optimal Weigh for Life Program are provided in a chapter by Ebbeling and Ludwig [29]. Ebbeling et al. [23] examined the effect of a reduced glycemic-load (GL) diet compared with an energy-restricted, reduced-fat diet in obese adolescents aged 13 to 21 years. Fourteen subjects completed the study, with seven subjects assigned to each diet. The reduced-GL diet emphasized selection of carbohydrate-containing foods that are characterized by a low to moderate glycemic index (GI). The macronutrient goals of this diet included 45 to 50% of energy from carbohydrates, 30 to 35% from fat, and the remaining proportion from protein. The subjects were instructed to consume the carbohydrates along with protein and fat at every meal and snack. The reduced-fat diet emphasized limiting fat intake and increasing the consumption of grains, vegetables, and fruits. Tailored individual meal prescriptions were developed to elicit a negative energy balance of 250 to 500 kcal per day. The macronutrient goals of the reduced-fat diet were 55 to 60% of energy intake from carbohydrates, 25 to 30% from fat, and the remainder from protein. At the end of 12 months, the subjects in the low-GI group displayed a significant decrease in fat mass and BMI compared with the reduced-fat diet subjects. In the Committed to Kids weight management program, Brown and others [25] demonstrated improvements in the lipid profiles and weight status/adiposity of 53 children, 7 to 17 years of age, after a very low calorie diet, nutrition education, structured exercise, increased physical activity, and behavior modification. In a series of three studies, Sothern and colleagues [5,25,27,30] examined the change in weight status/adiposity in children and adolescents, 7 to 17 years of age, after participation in behavior modification, nutrition education, structured exercise, increased physical activity, and a very low calorie diet or balanced hypocaloric diet (based on initial weight status). The multidisciplinary program included a very low calorie diet that provided 600 to 800 kcal/day and 1.5 to 2.0 gm/kg of ideal body weight in severely obese children (BMI = 34.1 ± 4.8 and greater than 97th percentile BMI). The protein-sparing modified fast (PSMF) restricted carbohydrate intake to 20 to 25 g/day to induce ketosis. The diet was supplemented with additional calorie-free liquids (2 L/day), a multivitamin with minerals, 800 mg/day of calcium, and 25 meq/day KCl. Subjects reduced weight approximately 30% after 10 weeks and maintained the weight loss at 1 year. Resting energy expenditure and lean body mass were maintained, relative VO2 max (but not absolute) was improved, and relative fat (percentage), total cholesterol, and low-density lipoproteins were reduced after 10 weeks. In one study, however, two males and four females exhibited growth velocities below the third percentile for their chronological age. However, the females’ heights at the end of the study were normal for the height of an adult North American female. Regardless, in some patients this severe caloric restriction may negatively affect growth velocity even in the presence of exercise and close medical supervision. Clinical trials conducted in adults using very low calorie diets illustrate that it may be unnecessary to reduce the daily calorie level below 800 kcal/day. Sothern and colleagues conducted clinical outcome trials using an alternative high-protein dietary approach called the Protein Modified Fast (PMF) diet (Table 12.3). The PMF diet is higher in total calories, protein, and carbohydrate than the PSMF diet and is a nonketogenic approach. Subjects receiving the PMF diet plus exercise and behavioral counseling were compared with subjects who were prescribed the traditional PSMF diet plus exercise and behavioral counseling. Both groups had significant reductions in BMI percentile at 10 weeks that were maintained at 1 year. In addition, although the PMF was higher in calories, the change in BMI did not differ significantly between the groups [32]. Although preliminary, these results indicate that it may be unnecessary to reduce calories below 800 kcal/day. Because PSMF may
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TABLE 12.3 Protein Modified Fast Diet 800–1000 calories (depending on the protein prescription) High protein: 2–2.5 g/kg ideal body weight (average 90–140 g/day) Reduced carbohydrate: 50–75 g/day Reduced fat: 30–45 g/day Lean meat and substitutes: 13–20 oz/day Vegetables (reduced carbohydrate) Bread/Starch/Fruit/Milk: 2–3 units/day combined (45–50 g carbohydrates) Free foods such as tea, mustard, bouillon, pickles, spices Fluid: 64–96 oz minimum per day Supplements: Daily multivitamin with minerals; elemental calcium: 1200–1400 mg/day; additional potassium may be necessary Duration: 10–20 weeks Note: For full description of the Protein Modified Fast diet, refer to Appendix A3.8.
negatively affect growth velocity in some children, PMF may provide a useful alternative in severely obese children. However, this warrants further investigation under randomized, controlled conditions. The remainder of this chapter provides a sample nutrition education curriculum that can be implemented in a group, family-based, multidisciplinary setting.
A SAMPLE NUTRITION EDUCATION CURRICULUM IN THE CLINICAL SETTING Nutrition education centers on identifying high-calorie and low-calorie foods in each food group. Nutrition sessions are conducted in a group with patients, parents, siblings, and extended family and friends in attendance. Patient participation is encouraged during the cooking demonstrations, calorie-counting, and food-measuring activities. During the early lessons of the program, nutrition information is delivered in a simple, knowledge-based format. As the groups progress through the different levels, the activities require more advanced levels of comprehension and problem-solving skills. The long-term goal of education is to enable patients and their families to adequately identify, select, and prepare foods that are appropriate to continued weight maintenance and good health. Sample lesson plans follow.
DIET INSTRUCTION Participants will need to have a copy of Table 12.1, Nutrition Plan Portion Control Chart, the Table of Food Portions and Units located in Appendix A3.4, a notepad and a pen, and the program book [31]. First, review what calories are and how they relate to a weight-loss diet: Calories are the energy produced in our body from the foods that we eat. When we eat more food (calories) than our bodies need, the extra calories are stored in our bodies as fat (weight gain). When we eat fewer calories than we need, our bodies will break down fat (weight loss) to get the energy they need. It takes about 3500 extra calories to make 1 pound of body fat. For example, if you eat 500 calories per day fewer than what your body needs, you will lose one pound of body fat per week. You can also burn off extra calories by increasing your activity. For example, if you eat 500 fewer calories per day than what you need and you burn an additional 250 calories per day by exercising, you will lose about 1.5 pounds of body fat per week. Second, review where calories in foods come from: There are three major kinds of nutrients in food that give us calories: carbohydrate, protein, and fat. Protein helps to build and maintain
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your muscle tissue. Carbohydrate helps to give us energy. Small amounts of fat are necessary to maintain certain body functions. Carbohydrate and protein produce 4 calories per gram. Fat produces 9 calories per gram. Because the same amount of fat has more than twice the calories as carbohydrate or protein, choosing foods that are low in fat will help reduce the amount of calories you consume. Because carbohydrate and protein still produce calories, eating too much of even low-fat foods can give you too many calories. Choosing low-fat foods and watching portion sizes should be used as part of a weight-loss diet. Third, review the rationale of the food unit system: Foods can be grouped into food groups or food units based on their nutrient content. There are six basic food units: meat and meat substitutes, vegetables, starches and breads, fruit, milk and dairy, and fat groups. You will be allowed a certain number of servings or “units” from each food group to meet your calorie requirements (see Appendix A3.4). Fourth, review Table 12.1, the Nutrition Plan Portion Control Chart. Next, review Table 12.2, Daily Energy Needs and Average Calorie Requirements. Last, review the Table of Food Portions and Units in Appendix A3.4.
FOOD LABS: THE MEAT
AND
PROTEIN GROUP
The instructor will need the following items for this lesson: food scale; cooked meat, fish, and poultry (e.g., large steak, chicken breast, filet of fish); tuna (canned in water); mayonnaise (regular); packaged cheese; and the program book [31]. First, review the specific meat and substitute group and fat grams. Second, have participants volunteer to weigh and measure items. Calculate the calories and fat grams and weigh meats to demonstrate portion sizes. Have group guess the weights before weighing. After weighing the meat, calculate the calories and fat grams based on exchange values. Emphasize caloric and fat difference. Specifically emphasize caloric density. Third, measure one cup of tuna and calculate the calories (1/2 cup of water-packed tuna = 100 calories and 4 g fat). Add 1 tablespoon of mayonnaise (1 tablespoon of mayonnaise = 100 calories and 11 g fat) at a time, calculating the calories and fat grams until the tuna salad is made. Emphasize caloric difference between plain tuna and tuna salad. Fourth, weigh the cheese. Have the group estimate the caloric and fat gram value before weighing. Emphasize the caloric density of cheese.
COOKING DEMONSTRATIONS: FUN
IN THE
KITCHEN — LOW-CALORIE PIZZA
The instructor will need the following items for this lesson: baking sheet, nonstick cooking spray, “lite” bread, tomato sauce, Italian seasoning, low-fat mozzarella cheese, vegetable toppings (sliced tomatoes, mushrooms, bell peppers, onions, artichokes, etc.), oven/broiler, and program book [31]. First, in a group setting, have participants help prepare low-calorie pizza (see Appendix A3.6.1 for full recipe). Second, review ingredients during preparation, including “lite” bread calories (onehalf the calories of regular bread), tomato sauce, low-fat cheese, and vegetable toppings. Third, review the low-fat cheese label; compare with regular cheese. Emphasize the importance of measuring cheese — have participants measure and review one-quarter cup volume. Fourth, review and emphasize the low-calorie vegetable topping options. Fifth, review and emphasize the use of nonstick cooking spray versus oil. Finally, review the importance of serving appropriate portion sizes as you serve the participants.
NUTRITION GAMES: SNACK-FOOD JEOPARDY The instructor will need the following materials for this lesson: assorted snack samples (Table 12.4) and small incentive prizes for participants, such as stickers, pencils, balls, coloring books [31], and so on.
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TABLE 12.4 Snack-Food Jeopardy Instructor List Item Raisins Cake (medium slice) Nachos and cheese (medium serving) Fresh fruit (1 medium) Low-fat, sugar-free yogurt (4 oz) Candy bar, jumbo Potato chips (3 oz) Graham crackers (3 squares) Hot cocoa, sugar-free (1 packet) Life Savers™ (1 packet) Popcorn, air-popped (6 cups) Peanuts (1 cup) Carrot or celery sticks (3 cups) a
Calories
Fat, grams
60 600 800 60 40
0 30 40 0 0
a
a
450 80 50 120 140 930 40
30 0 0 0 0 35 0
Check calories and fat grams on the package label.
Instruct the participants to gather around the table. Place various snack foods on the table with small cards (placed face down) indicating the calorie and fat grams contained in each. Call out a calorie or fat value and ask participants to identify the snack that contains those values. Turn the card over and compare answers. Provide a small incentive prize to the participant who first correctly identifies the correct snack. You may also want to include sugar grams when you call out a value. Refer to package labeling or the program book [31] for the specific sugar grams contained in each snack.
CLASS DISCUSSION: CALCIUM: THE BONE-BUILDER The participants will need the hand-out “Calcium: The Bone-Builder,” located in Appendix A3.7, and the program book [31]. First, review and discuss the importance of adequate calcium intake. Children should consume 800 to 1200 mg calcium per day, depending on age. Adult women should consume 800 to 1000 mg calcium per day, and those at higher risk should consume 1000 to 1500 mg per day. Second, review calcium content of various foods and daily requirements (Table 12.5). Although a number of foods contain calcium, dairy products are the chief source of calcium in the diet. Recommended daily intake of the milk/dairy group is two to four servings per day to meet the minimum calcium requirements. Third, discuss the risk of developing bone disorders such as osteoporosis. Osteoporosis is a gradual loss of structural minerals or decalcification of bones that begins at adulthood and progresses with increasing age. It is a crippling bone disease that affects one of every four Caucasian women over the age of 65 years. Women at highest risk for developing osteoporiosis include Caucasian and Asian women; small-framed, thin women; women who do not exercise; women who do not drink milk; chronic dieters; postmenopausal women; and smokers. Inadequate calcium intake is a major contributing factor to osteoporosis, because a low calcium intake accelerates bone loss.
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TABLE 12.5 Calcium Content of Common Foods Milk and Dairy Products (milligrams of calcium) Low-fat or skim milk, 1 cup 300 Low-fat yogurt (plain), 1 cup 415 Low-fat yogurt (fruit-flavored), 1 cup 345 American cheese, 1 oz 174 Swiss cheese, 1 oz 272 Cheddar cheese, 1 oz 204 Mozzarella cheese, 1 oz 207 Cottage cheese, 1 cup 145 Ice milk, 1/2 cup 88 Sherbet, 1/2 cup 52 Pudding, 1/2 cup 133 Custard, 1/2 cup 149 Other Sources (milligrams of calcium) Beans, 1 cup 90 Broccoli, 1/2 cup 47 Cheese pizza, 1 slice 220 Collard greens, 1/2 cup 179 Macaroni and cheese, 1/2 cup 181 Salmon (with bones), 3 oz 167 Sardines (with bones) 3 oz 371 Shrimp, 3 oz 98 Soups made with milk, 1 cup 165
SUMMARY Typically, children begin gaining unnecessary weight between the ages of 3 and 7 years. By then, they are spending a good deal of time sitting behind a desk at school. After school, they might play video or computer games or watch several hours of television. Meanwhile, they may be eating fast food three to six times per week (the national average). Once they become overweight, other children may tease them relentlessly, and they may turn to food for comfort, which causes more weight gain. Pediatric health care providers can help parents to stop the vicious cycle on all fronts by guiding the children to make changes in the home environment that will promote healthy eating. In fact, the family environment has the greatest effect of all on children’s weight gain. The flip side of this fact is that the family environment also has the greatest effect on the child’s ability to achieve a healthy weight and build a lifetime of healthy habits — but it doesn’t happen overnight. Change must come gradually for parents to experience success. Establishing just one nutrition goal per pediatric office visit can go a long way to creating a nutritious, physically active home environment (Table 12.6). Providing brief information on strategies to help achieve these goals takes only a few minutes. The rewards to the patient’s health far exceed the extra time and attention.
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TABLE 12.6 Nutrition Education: Goals and Strategies for Parents Nutrition Goals Replace unhealthy snacks with fruits, vegetables, and other healthy offerings.
Strategies Allow infrequent consumption of nonnutritious foods away from the home. Keep within reach nutritious foods naturally low in saturated fat and sugar and high in fiber. Gradually reduce fast food consumption to less than one time per week. Take children along when shopping. Have them select one fruit and one vegetable to try for the week and skip the candy, cookie, and soft drink aisle. 6. Purchase bottled water instead of soda, which is high in sugar. 7. Give your children water when they are thirsty, not high-sugar beverages.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Decrease eating in front of the TV/computer.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Establish family dinners on the weekend. Include children in meal preparation. Use the china and make it special. Gradually include weekdays. Eventually restrict all eating and drinking (except water) to the kitchen counter, table, or dining room. 6. Serve children an appropriate portion size (usually about 1/2 cup) of each food prepared. Children will eat more if you serve them more. 7. Encourage at least three bites of each food on the plate. 8. Grade the foods, A, B, C, or F. High-scoring veggies are served again and often.
Promote regular consumption of healthy breakfasts.
1. Discourage snacking after dinner. (If children are not hungry when they awake, they may be eating too late at night.) 2. Plan breakfast the night before and make it attractive. 3. Select high-fiber cereals, breads, and other baked goods. 4. Serve reduced-fat turkey bacon, turkey sausage, or veggie substitutes 5. Try a low-fat cheese omelet made with scrambled egg substitute. 6. Serve low-fat milk rather than fruit drinks. 7. Serve fruits instead of concentrated juice. 8. Try a fruit juice “spritzer”: 3 oz fruit juice mixed with 5 oz club soda or sparkling water.
Establish a healthy relationship with food.
1. Help your child to understand that there are no “bad” or “good” foods. 2. Encourage your child to select more of the healthy variety, and NEVER give food as a reward. 3. Teach children that it is okay to leave food on their plate. This teaches them to self-regulate and not to overeat. 4. Stop the nagging. Do not draw attention to negative behaviors. 5. Rather, spend your energy praising your child when she chooses healthy foods or physical activity. 6. When your child selects an unhealthy snack or heads for the television, try to redirect and give choices: “Do you want strawberries, carrots, or melon for your snack?” He can’t choose what is not offered.
Source: Sothern et al. Trim Kids, New York: Harper Collins, 2001.
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REFERENCES 1. Saelens, B. E., J. F. Sallis, D. E. Wilfley, K. Patrick, J. A. Cella, and R. Buchta. Behavioral weight control for overweight adolescents initiated in primary care. Obes Res. 10:22–32, 2002. 2. Epstein, L. H., R. R. Wing, and A. Valoski. Childhood obesity. Pediatr Clin North Am. 32:363–379, 1985. 3. Kirschenbaum, H. L. and J. M. Rosenberg. Educational programs offered by colleges of pharmacy and drug information centers within the United States. Am J Pharm Educ. 48:155–157, 1984. 4. Sothern, M. S., S. Hunter, R. M. Suskind, R. Brown, J. N. Udall, Jr., and U. Blecker. Motivating the obese child to move: the role of structured exercise in pediatric weight management. South Med J. 92:577–584, 1999. 5. Sothern, M. S., H. Schumacher, T. K. von Almen, L. K. Carlisle, and J. N. Udall. Committed to kids: an integrated, 4-level team approach to weight management in adolescents. J Am Diet Assoc. 102:S81–S85, 2002. 6. Spieth, L. E., J. D. Harnish, C. M. Lenders, L. B. Raezer, M. A. Pereira, S. J. Hangen, and D. S. Ludwig. A low-glycemic index diet in the treatment of pediatric obesity. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 154:947–951, 2000. 7. Schwingshandl, J., K. Sudi, B. Eibl, S. Wallner, and M. Borkenstein. Effect of an individualised training programme during weight reduction on body composition: a randomised trial. Arch Dis Child. 81:426–428, 1999. 8. The Writing Group for the DISC Collaborative Research Group. Efficacy and safety of lowering dietary intake of fat and cholesterol in children with elevated low-density lipoprotein cholesterol: The Dietary Intervention Study in Children (DISC). JAMA. 273:1429–1435, 1995. 9. Obarzanek, E., S. Y. Kimm, B. A. Barton, L. L. Van Horn, P. O. Kwiterovich, Jr., D. G. SimonsMorton et al. Long-term safety and efficacy of a cholesterol-lowering diet in children with elevated low-density lipoprotein cholesterol: seven-year results of the Dietary Intervention Study in Children (DISC). Pediatrics. 107:256–264, 2001. 10. Epstein, L., Woodall, K., Goreczny, A. et al. The modification of activity patterns and energy expenditure in obese young girls. Behav Ther. 15:101–108, 1984. 11. Epstein, L. H., R. R. Wing, B. C. Penner, and M. J. Kress. Effect of diet and controlled exercise on weight loss in obese children. J Pediatr. 107:358–361, 1985. 12. Epstein, L. H. Methodological issues and ten-year outcomes for obese children. Ann N Y Acad Sci. 699:237–249, 1993. 13. Epstein, L. H., S. J. McKenzie, A. Valoski, K. R. Klein, and R. R. Wing. Effects of mastery criteria and contingent reinforcement for family-based child weight control. Addict Behav. 19:135–145, 1994. 14. Epstein, L. H., A. Valoski, R. Koeske, and R. R. Wing. Family-based behavioral weight control in obese young children. J Am Diet Assoc. 86:481–484, 1986. 15. Epstein, L. H., A. Valoski, and J. McCurley. Effect of weight loss by obese children on long-term growth. Am J Dis Child. 147:1076–1080, 1993. 16. Epstein, L. H., A. Valoski, R. R. Wing, and J. McCurley. Ten-year follow-up of behavioral, familybased treatment for obese children. JAMA. 264:2519–2523, 1990. 17. Epstein, L. H., A. Valoski, R. R. Wing, and J. McCurley. Ten-year outcomes of behavioral familybased treatment for childhood obesity. Health Psychol. 13:373–383, 1994. 18. Epstein, L. H., R. R. Wing, R. Koeske, and A. Valoski. Effect of parent weight on weight loss in obese children. J Consult Clin Psychol. 54:400–401, 1986. 19. Mellin, L. M., L. A. Slinkard, and C. E. Irwin, Jr. Adolescent obesity intervention: validation of the SHAPEDOWN program. J Am Diet Assoc. 87:333–338, 1987. 20. Resnicow, K., A. L. Yaroch, A. Davis, D. T. Wang, S. Carter, L. Slaughter et al. GO GIRLS! Results from a nutrition and physical activity program for low-income, overweight African American adolescent females. Health Educ Behav. 27:616–631, 2000. 21. Eliakim, A., G. Kaven, I. Berger, O. Friedland, B. Wolach, and D. Nemet. The effect of a combined intervention on body mass index and fitness in obese children and adolescents — a clinical experience. Eur J Pediatr. 161:449–454, 2002. 22. Nuutinen, O. and M. Knip. Predictors of weight reduction in obese children. Eur J Clin Nutr. 46:785–794, 1992.
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23. Ebbeling, C. B., M. M. Leidig, K. B. Sinclair, J. P. Hangen, and D. S. Ludwig. A reduced-glycemic load diet in the treatment of adolescent obesity. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 157:773–779, 2003. 24. Sondike, S. B., N. Copperman, and M. S. Jacobson. Effects of a low-carbohydrate diet on weight loss and cardiovascular risk factor in overweight adolescents. J Pediatr. 142:253–258, 2003. 25. Brown, R., M. Sothern, R. Suskind, J. Udall, and U. Blecker. Racial differences in the lipid profiles of obese children and adolescents before and after significant weight loss. Clin Pediatr (Phila). 39:427–431, 2000. 26. Sothern, M. S., B. Despinasse, R. Brown, R. M. Suskind, J. N. Udall, Jr., and U. Blecker. Lipid profiles of obese children and adolescents before and after significant weight loss: differences according to sex. South Med J. 93:278–282, 2000. 27. Sothern, M., J. Udall, R. Suskind, A. Vargas, and U. Blecker. Weight loss and growth velocity in obese children after very low calorie diet, exercise and behavior modification. Acta Paediat. 89:1036–1043, 2000. 28. Sothern, M. S., J. M. Loftin, J. N. Udall, R. M. Suskind, T. L. Ewing, S. C. Tang, and U. Blecker. Safety, feasibility, and efficacy of a resistance training program in preadolescent obese children. Am J Med Sci. 319:370–375, 2000. 29. Ebbeling, C. B. and D. L. Ludwig. Dietary approaches for obesity treatment and prevention in children and adolescents. In: M. Goran and M.I Sothern. Ed. Handbook of Pediatric Obesity: Epidemiology, Etiology and Prevention. Boca Raton, FL: Taylor & Francis, 2006. 30. Sothern, M. S., M. Loftin, U. Blecker, and J. N. Udall, Jr. Impact of significant weight loss on maximal oxygen uptake in obese children and adolescents. J Investig Med. 48:411–416, 2000. 31. Sothern, M., T. K. Von Almen, and H. Schumacher. Trim Kids: The Proven Plan That Has Helped Thousands of Children Achieve a Healthier Weight. New York: Harper Collins Publishers, 2001. 32. Sothern, M., C. vanVrancken, H. Schumacher, L. Carlisle, S. Gordon, J. Reed et al. A controlled comparison of high protein, low carbohydrate diets with different daily calorie levels in severely obese children. Obes Res. 9:204S, 2001.
Section 6 Behavioral Counseling
Counseling: 13 Behavioral Family-Based Behavioral Counseling in Clinical Settings Valerie H. Myers and Pamela Davis Martin CONTENTS Behavioral Treatment Techniques..................................................................................................148 Goal Setting and Action Planning........................................................................................148 Self-Monitoring ....................................................................................................................149 Stimulus Control and Cue Elimination................................................................................149 Modification of Eating and Activity Patterns ......................................................................149 Contingency Management....................................................................................................149 Social Reinforcement and Modeling ...................................................................................149 Relapse Prevention and Problem Solving............................................................................149 Overview of Family-Based Studies ...............................................................................................150 Literature Review .................................................................................................................150 Family-Based Counseling Interventions ..............................................................................150 Group Treatment...................................................................................................................150 Weight Maintenance .............................................................................................................164 Adolescents...........................................................................................................................164 Component Analysis of Behavioral Techniques ..................................................................165 Summary...............................................................................................................................165 Parent Training or Modeling Interventions ...................................................................................165 Weight Maintenance .............................................................................................................166 Parents as the Focus of Treatment .......................................................................................166 Summary...............................................................................................................................166 Individual Treatment Approaches ..................................................................................................166 Summary ........................................................................................................................................167 Acknowledgment............................................................................................................................167 References ......................................................................................................................................167 Childhood obesity is a worldwide health concern of epidemic proportions. The prevalence of obesity in children and adolescents has risen over the last 20 years among all ethnicities, ages, and genders [1–3]. According to the U.S. Surgeon General, 13% of children aged 6 to 11 years and 14% of adolescents aged 12 to 19 years in the United States are overweight. Overweight adolescents have a 70% chance of becoming overweight or obese adults. This risk increases to 80% if one or more parents are overweight or obese. There are a significant number of medical sequelae and risk factors associated with pediatric obesity, many of which are commonly believed to occur only in the adult population. Specifically, hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, type II diabetes, glucose intolerance, some forms of cancer, 147
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musculoskeletal injuries [4], premature pubarche [5,6], and future cardiovascular disease [7] are associated with childhood obesity. Research indicates that the psychosocial consequences of overweight/obesity among children and adolescents are serious and highly prevalent [2]. Obese children may experience higher levels of depression and lower self-esteem [2,8]. In addition, overweight and obese children can be targets of social discrimination by peers, family members, and teachers [9,10]. Research suggests that familial factors impact the development of childhood obesity. However, it is unclear the impact that environment and genetics play on these familial factors [11]. Estimates suggest that only 7% of children will become obese when born to parents of normal weight [12,13]. However, if one parent is obese, the risk of childhood obesity increases to 40%, and the lifetime risk factor for developing obesity doubles; to 80% for that child if both parents are obese [12,13]. Behavior is influenced by numerous factors, making behavior change a complex process. Healthy dietary intake and physical activity are important aspects in reducing obesity in children and adolescents and are both behavioral and modifiable in nature [2]. Family behavioral counseling and parent training sessions are effective methods for preventing and treating childhood obesity [14–19] and are considered a vital component of the majority of published studies that show efficacious results. There are several types of effective behavioral treatment strategies in the management of overweight, and many of the family-based behavioral counseling interventions used are based on well-established theories such as social learning theory, social cognitive theory, and social action theory [20]. In more than 100 controlled studies (mostly adult), behavioral weight loss treatments have demonstrated efficacy over placebo, traditional diet, insight therapy, nutritional information, and control groups [21,22]. Weight loss has been shown to be positively correlated with a number of behavioral therapy techniques [23]. The importance of behavior therapy in the pediatric obesity program has also been demonstrated, making this a standard component in clinical treatment programs [24,25].
BEHAVIORAL TREATMENT TECHNIQUES The specific behavioral strategies found to be most effective in achieving and maintaining lifestyle change include self-monitoring, stimulus control, problem solving, relapse prevention, contingency management, social support, offering choices, and individualizing feedback. Although published reports support the effectiveness of these various behavioral techniques, none stands by itself as a means to promote weight loss and maintenance. Instead, these techniques tend to be used in combination (e.g., in a multicomponent approach as offered through behavioral group therapy meetings). Behavioral weight management treatment strategies focus primarily on maladaptive eating and exercise patterns that lead to positive energy balance and, eventually, weight gain. Environmental antecedents and the consequences of eating behavior are key components of behavioral weight programs. Personal and global antecedents are identified, and then participants are instructed in methods to modify these cues for responding. The positive behavioral consequences of specific eating or activity patterns are also explored because they are likely to increase the frequency of these behaviors. Participants are also instructed in the potential negative consequences of their current patterns of behavior in an attempt to decrease the frequency of these behaviors. The following behavioral treatment strategies have been shown to be efficacious in the treatment of overweight and obesity and are designed to increase awareness of eating and activity patterns, to normalize eating patterns, to reduce exposure to cues for maladaptive eating or activity patterns, and to alter the response to problem situations [26–30].
GOAL SETTING
AND
ACTION PLANNING
This is often the initial starting point of behavioral programs. Goal setting and action planning involves setting goals for calories, fat, physical activity, and other modifiable behaviors. Because participants are often unrealistic in their weight loss expectations, realistic expectations for shortterm and long-term goals are presented to facilitate behavior change.
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SELF-MONITORING The self-monitoring technique is considered the “cornerstone” of behavioral treatment and involves daily observation and record keeping of eating and exercise behaviors. Monitoring is used to increase awareness of behavior patterns by identifying antecedents or reinforcing consequences that lead to or strengthen faulty eating and activity patterns. Record keeping can also be expanded to include a variety of information about emotions associated with eating, hunger ratings, time of activities, etc.
STIMULUS CONTROL
AND
CUE ELIMINATION
Participants are often unaware of how their environment influences their behavior. Stimulus control techniques are used to identify and then modify environmental antecedents that influence eating or activity patterns. The goal is to restrict environmental circumstances that serve as discriminative stimuli for maladaptive eating or sedentary behavior. Techniques typically include instructions such as a specified number of meals and snacks to eat, specified eating times or places, and changing serving and food storage techniques. These procedures are used to decrease the number of conditioned stimuli or situations that may trigger eating behavior.
MODIFICATION
OF
EATING
AND
ACTIVITY PATTERNS
The goal of these modification techniques is to change faulty eating behaviors that may interfere with satiety or lead to excessive calorie intake, as well as those that lead to sedentary behaviors. Typical techniques include slowing pace of eating, reducing portion sizes, measuring food intake, leaving food on plate, improving food choices, and eliminating second servings. In addition, nutrition education on healthy eating is provided. Sedentary behaviors are also targeted, and efforts are made to incorporate increased activity into the daily routine by taking the stairs, parking farther from the building, walking or biking rather than driving.
CONTINGENCY MANAGEMENT Positive reinforcement is used to acquire and stabilize new weight management behaviors. Programs focus typically on positive reinforcing consequences for the development or implementation of behavioral changes such as healthier eating or activity patterns rather than weight loss. Punishment or loss of reinforcement, as well as parent-limiting techniques, may also be used to change eating and activity behaviors. Parents are encouraged to eliminate all food rewards and are encouraged to use other methods of motivating or rewarding their children. Monetary incentives have been used in many treatment programs to improve motivation. Behavioral contracting with a therapist or parent may also be used to gain social reinforcements. Behavioral contracting is helpful because it (1) gets the individual involved and invested in treatment, (2) provides a written outline of expected behaviors that reduces forgetfulness and disagreement on goals, and (3) provides an outline of how rewards are obtained based on the fulfillment of a specified goal.
SOCIAL REINFORCEMENT
AND
MODELING
Children learn behaviors through observation of others and subsequent reinforcement and punishment of behavior choices, as well as through experiencing the consequences of their own behaviors. In this technique, parents and children are taught to serve as appropriate models for other family/ household members and are encouraged to provide positive attention and praise for healthful eating and exercise behaviors.
RELAPSE PREVENTION
AND
PROBLEM SOLVING
This technique involves identifying specific problems or potential problems that are interfering with goals. Once problems are identified, possible solutions are brainstormed, pros/cons of the solutions are evaluated, and then a plan is implemented.
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OVERVIEW OF FAMILY-BASED STUDIES Two recent evidence-based publications have evaluated individual and family-based studies in the treatment of childhood obesity. A position paper by the American Dietetic Association [15] evaluated 40 individual-based and family-based studies. All studies used a combination of diet, exercise/ physical activity, and behavior modification. Findings indicated that the inclusion of the family in counseling sessions improved both short-term and long-term outcomes. In a recent metaanalysis, McLean and colleagues [19] evaluated 16 weight-loss interventions incorporating a family-based component with at least 1-year follow-up data. The authors concluded that (1) few intervention studies with long-term follow-up data exist, (2) there are few studies targeting adolescents, (3) parental involvement is associated with weight loss in children, and (4) a greater range of behavioral techniques improves weight outcomes.
LITERATURE REVIEW The primary aim of this chapter is to review randomized controlled trials using individual and group family-based counseling weight management interventions in clinical settings. Forty-nine studies of children and adolescents were identified as containing either a family-based or individualbased behavioral counseling component. Of these 49 studies, 31 were a randomized controlled design that met the following criteria: (1) study duration of greater than 8 weeks, (2) number of participants greater than 30, and (3) use of behavioral counseling techniques (Table 13.1). Two additional randomized controlled trials did not enroll over 30 participants; however, given the robustness of the findings, they were included for discussion (Table 13.1). Of the 33 trials, 30 studies demonstrating significant results included behavioral counseling as a central component [17,18,31–58]. In addition, 16 studies of “other” design or unspecified randomization were also identified (Table 13.2) [59–74].
FAMILY-BASED COUNSELING INTERVENTIONS Clinical interventions for the treatment of childhood obesity often use family-based counseling approaches. Research suggests that a family therapy component (minimum of one parent and child) in most obesity treatment programs results in significant reductions in adiposity in children between the ages of 6 and 12 years. Specifically, in 27 of the 30 randomized controlled studies using familybased approaches, children significantly reduced weight status. All of these findings suggest that family involvement is associated with significant weight loss in preadolescent children. Additional studies with children have included one or more components of diet, exercise, and behavior. However, it was unclear from the intervention descriptions in the methods section whether familybased counseling was implemented.
GROUP TREATMENT Group treatment with family-based counseling was identified in 27 randomized, controlled trials [16–18,31–37,39–42,44,47–49,51–56] and 10 studies of other design [58,75,76]. All of the treatment interventions addressed the following weight loss strategies: diet and exercise or increased physical activity/reduced sedentary behaviors. For example, Epstein and colleagues examined the effects of mastery criteria and contingent reinforcement for over 2 years in a family-based behavioral weight control program for obese children and their parents [54]. Families were randomly assigned to one of two group conditions. The experimental group was targeted and reinforced for mastery of diet, weight loss, exercise, and parenting skills. The control group was instructed on behavioral techniques and provided noncontingent reinforcement. Both groups received 6 months of familybased behavioral education in a weekly group format, as well as 6 monthly follow-up meetings. Children in the experimental group compared with the control group demonstrated significantly better relative weight change at 6 months and 1 year; however, effects were not maintained at 2 years.
76 families, with obese children, ages 6–12 years; 55 families at follow-up
55 of 76 families with overweight children enrolled initially in the study (72% retention)
185 families with overweight children, ages 8–12 years; final sample was 158 (85%)
Epstein et al., 1990 [17] Location: Pittsburgh, PA
Epstein et al., 1994 [18] Location: Pittsburgh, PA
Study Population
Epstein et al., 1981 [16] Location: Pittsburgh, PA
Study (Author/Year/Location)
8–12 weekly treatment meetings, 6–12 monthly meetings, 10-year follow-up
Eight weekly sessions, six monthly sessions, 21 months, 5-, and 10-year follow-up
14 sessions over 8 months, 21-month follow-up
Treatment Duration
D PA B
D PA B
D PA B
Reports on four randomized studies that included the treatment groups: child only vs. parent–child study; diet only vs. diet plus lifestyle change exercise; lifestyle vs. aerobic and calisthenics; parental weight status; Traffic Light Diet in all studies
Three groups Traffic Light Diet, exercise (aerobic, stretching, spot reducing), and behavioral reinforcements for all groups: child and parent target, child target, or nonspecific target (control)
Three groups Traffic Light Diet, aerobic exercise, and behavior modification for all groups: parent/child target, child target, or nonspecific target (control)
Study Design and Components
TABLE 13.1 Randomized Controlled Design Family-Based and Individual Intervention Trials
Weight, height, BMI, %overweight: Children in parent–child study decreased %overweight by 15.3% and control by 7.6% at 10 years. Child only vs. parent and child were significantly different (p < 0.025) at 5 years. %overweight in diet only (–8.4%) vs. diet plus exercise (–10.0%) were both significantly lower at 10 years but not from each other. %overweight decreased significantly at 10 years in lifestyleexercise (–19.7%) and aerobic (10.9%) but not calisthenics (+12.2%). Change from 5 to 10 years was significantly different as follows: lifestyle (p < 0.009) and aerobic (p < 0.04) from calisthenics.
Weight, height, %overweight: Children in the child and parent group showed significantly greater decreases in %overweight after 5 (–11.2%) and 10 (–7.5%) years than children in the nonspecific control group (+7.9% and +14.3%, respectively). Children in the childonly group showed increases in %overweight after 5 (+2.7%) and 10 (+4.5%) years.
Weight, height, skinfolds, %overweight: no significant difference among groups in decrease of %overweight.
Outcome Variables and Findings
Behavioral Counseling: Family-Based Behavioral Counseling in Clinical Settings 151
Study Population
60 overweight children, ages 6–11 years
40 overweight children, ages 6–12 years
663 prepubertal overweight children, ages 8–10 years; 623 completed the study
Study (Author/Year/Location)
Golan et al., 1998 [31] Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Graves et al., 1988 [32] Location: Memphis, TN
DISC Study, 1995 [33] Locations: Baltimore, MD; Chicago, IL; Iowa City, IA; Newark, NJ; New Orleans, LA; Portland, OR 3 years
8 weekly sessions with 6-month follow-up
12 months, varies among groups
Treatment Duration
D B
D PA B
D PA B
Two groups Dietary behavioral intervention: Group and individual sessions, diet- and family-based treatment, personalized counseling based on social learning theory and social action theory Usual care: educational publications provided
Three groups All groups received Traffic Light Diet, physical activity, and problem-solving instruction. Additional treatment based on group assignment: behavioral — 20-minute behavioral therapy during sessions; problem solving — 20-minute problem-solving activity during sessions; instruction only — 15-minutes of exercise during sessions.
Two groups Intervention: parent-only behavioral sessions, 4 weekly, then 4 biweekly, then 6 every 6 weeks; Control: childonly diet and physical activity instruction sessions 8 weekly, then biweekly sessions for 10 months
Study Design and Components
TABLE 13.1 (continued) Randomized Controlled Design Family-Based and Individual Intervention Trials
BMI, skinfold thickness, waist and hip circumference: no differences between groups in BMI or skinfolds. Intervention group had lower waist–hip ratio at 1 year but no difference at 3 years (p values not specified). The primary aim of the study was to reduce low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol, not adiposity.
Weight, height, %overweight, BMI: Children in problem-solving and behavioral groups decreased weight, %overweight, and BMI (p < 0.05) at 8 weeks. Differences were significant among groups: problem solving was greater than behavioral and instruction (p < 0.05). Significant differences were maintained at the 3- and 6-month follow-up. Only children in the problem-solving group maintained significant differences in %overweight and BMI at 6 months (p < 0.05).
Weight, height, %overweight: both groups significantly reduced %overweight at 12 months (p < 0.001 parent only and p < 0.01 child only). Children in the parent-only group had a significantly greater reduction in %overweight at 12 months (14.6%) than children in the child-only group (8.1%; p < 0.03).
Outcome Variables and Findings
152 Handbook of Pediatric Obesity: Clinical Management
Final sample: 113 families with overweight parents, overweight children ages 8–12 years
56 of 67 families with overweight children ages 8–12 years (29 boys, 27 girls)
41 families with overweight children ages 8–12 years; follow-up on 38 families
53 families with overweight children ages 8–12 years; final sample 47 families at 6 months, 34 families at 1 year
35 families with overweight children ages 8–12 years
Epstein et al., 1995 [34] Location: Pittsburgh, PA
Epstein et al., 2001 [35] Location: Pittsburgh, PA
Epstein et al., 1986 [36] Location: Pittsburgh, PA
Epstein et al., 1984 [37] Location: Pittsburgh, PA
Epstein et al., 1985 [38] Location: Pittsburgh, PA 8 weekly, 10 monthly sessions, 24-month follow-up
8 weekly, 3 biweekly, and 4 monthly meetings, 12-month follow-up.
8 weekly treatment meetings, 10 monthly meetings, 3-year follow-up.
16 weekly meetings followed by 2 biweekly meetings, 2 monthly meetings, 2-month follow-up
8 weekly treatment meetings, monthly meetings for 6–12 months, 5- and 10-year follow-up
D PA B
D PA B
D PA B
D PA SA B
D PA B
Three groups Traffic Light Diet and behavioral change and maintenance techniques for all participants; diet plus programmed aerobic exercise: walk, run, bike, or swim; diet plus lifestyle: lifestyle change exercise program; diet plus calisthenics: six of 12 calisthenics three times per week.
Three groups Traffic Light Diet plus lifestyle change exercise; Traffic Light Diet plus point economy system; waiting list control
Two groups 1200 kcal diet and lifestyle exercise program point economy to regulate child eating and exercise habits for both parent control and child self-control groups
Two groups Traffic Light Diet and spe-cific behavior change techniques for all participants. Reinforcement provided for either increasing physical activity (control) or increasing activity and de-creasing sedentary behavior (combined).
Three groups Traffic Light Diet, exercise (aerobic, stretching, spot reducing), and behavioral reinforcements for all groups: child and parent target, child target, or nonspecific target (control).
Weight, height, %overweight, BMI: Significant decreases in %overweight were observed at 2, 6, and 12 months in all three groups. No difference in %overweight at 12 months between groups. At 24 months, only the lifestyle group maintained relative weight changes in %overweight.
Weight, height, BMI: Both treatment groups had significantly lower BMI at 6 months than control group (p < 0.0001), and they were significantly lower than baseline at 6 months and 1 year. No significant differences were found between treatment groups at 6 months or 1 year.
BMI and %overweight: At 1 year, only children with nonobese parents had %overweight significantly lower than baseline (p < 0.01) and had 2.1 times the change in %overweight (16.3%) vs. children with obese parents (7.7%; p < 0.01). At 3 years, neither group had %overweight different from baseline.
BMI, %overweight: Boys in experimental group had significantly greater %overweight changes than girls (p < 0.001 combined group, p < 0.025 increase activity group). No sex differences in the control group.
BMI, %overweight: Significant differences in percentage of children vs. adults who had decrease of at least 20%overweight at 6 (p < 0.001), 60 (p < 0.001), and 120 (p < 0.001) months.
Behavioral Counseling: Family-Based Behavioral Counseling in Clinical Settings 153
Weekly meetings for 4 months, 2 monthly meetings, 1-year follow-up.
61 families with overweight children, ages 8–12 years; complete data for 55 families
Final sample: 62 parents and 62 overweight children, ages 8–12 years
34 families with overweight children, ages 8–13 years
40 overweight children, ages 9–13 years; final sample, 23 children
Epstein et al., 1995 [39] Location: Pittsburgh, PA
Epstein et al., 2000 [40] Location: Pittsburgh, PA
Israel et al., 1994 [41] Location: Albany, NY
Kirschenbaum et al., 1984 [42] Location: Madison, WI 9 weekly sessions, 3- and 12-month follow-up
8 weekly, 9 biweekly sessions for 26 weeks total treatment, 3-year follow-up
16 weekly sessions, 2 monthly sessions, 12- and 24-month follow-up.
Treatment Duration
Study Population
Study (Author/Year/Location)
B
B
D PA B
D PA SA B
Three groups Cognitive behavioral treatment for parent plus child, child only, and waiting list control groups
Two groups Both groups followed four-component model of self-regulation standard treatment, with a parental-control focus; enhanced child involvement: child management of weight loss
Three groups Lifestyle exercise, Traffic Light Diet, behavioral reinforcement for all participants; groups based on problem solving taught to parent and child, problem solving to child only, and no problem solving (control)
Three groups Traffic Light Diet and tailored instruction for behavioral principles for all participants; reinforcement provided for decreasing sedentary activity (sedentary), increasing physical activity (exercise), or increasing physical activity and decreasing sedentary behavior (combined)
Study Design and Components
TABLE 13.1 (continued) Randomized Controlled Design Family-Based and Individual Intervention Trials
Weight, height, adjusted weight, %overweight: Both parents and children in parent-plus-child group and child-only group significantly reduced weight, %overweight, and weight index compared with the control group (p < 0.01) at posttreatment and 3-month follow-up.
Weight, height, %overweight, triceps skinfolds thickness: All groups significantly decreased %overweight and triceps skinfolds at 26 weeks (p < 0.01). %overweight increased above posttreatment levels in all groups at 3-year follow-up.
Weight, height, BMI z-score: No significant differences in BMI z-score between groups at 6 months (all decreased). From baseline to 24 months, both problem-solving to child (.9) and control (1.1) significantly reduced BMI z score > problem-solving parent and child (.5).
Weight, height, %overweight, percentage body fat, waist–hip ratio: Significant differences between groups in %overweight at 4 months (reducing sedentary < physical activity; p < 0.05) and 12 months (reducing sedentary < physical activity and both; p < 0.05).
Outcome Variables and Findings
154 Handbook of Pediatric Obesity: Clinical Management
94 overweight children, ages 10–11 years
42 obese adolescents, ages 12–16 years
36 overweight adolescents
72 obese adolescents, ages 10–17 years; 10 nonobese adolescents ages 10–14 years
Flodmark et al., 1993 [43] Location: Lund, Switzerland
Brownell et al., 1983 [44] Location: Williamsport, PA
Becque et al., 1988 [45] Location: Ann Arbor, MI
Rocchini et al., 1988 [46] Location: Ann Arbor, MI 20 weeks
20 weeks
16 weeks with followup session every 2 months for 1 year.
14–18 month treatment, 1-year follow-up
D PA B
D PA B
D PA B
D PA B
Three groups Weekly diet and behavior change sessions for treatment groups: diet, behavior change, and exercise (with exercise sessions three times per week); diet and behavior only; the control group received no treatment
Three groups Weekly diet and behavior change sessions for treatment groups: diet, behavior change, and exercise (with exercise sessions three times per week), and diet and behavior only; the control group received no treatment
Three groups All groups received diet, exercise, behavior modification, and social support instruction; groups were distinguished by session attendance: mother–child together, mother–child separately, or child alone
Three groups No intervention (control), conventional treatment (CT), or family therapy; both treatment groups received dietary counseling (1500–1700-kcal diet) and medical checkups, and the family group also received family therapy
Weight, height, percentage fat by hydrostatic weighing: Compared to overweight control group, both treatment groups reduced body weight and percentage fat significantly (p < 0.01).
Weight, percentage fat by hydrostatic weighing: Changes in total number of risk factors, of which percentage fat was included, were significantly greater in the exercise/diet/behavior group (p < 0.01).
Weight, %overweight and BMI: %overweight and weight changes were significantly greater in the mother–child separately group compared with other groups at 16 weeks (p < 0.01 and p < 0.04, respectively) and at 1 year (p < 0.05 and p < 0.01, respectively).
Weight, height, BMI, skinfolds: Family group had a significantly lesser increase in BMI than CT group (0.66% vs. 2.31%; p < 0.042) and greater decrease in skinfolds (16.8 vs. +6.8%; p < 0.034) at the end of treatment. One year following the end of treatment, BMI was significantly less increased (p < 0.022) in the family group compared with the control group. BMI did not significantly differ between family and CT or controls and CT at 1-year follow-up.
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47 overweight AfricanAmerican girls, ages 12–16 years; 36 completed, 31 in follow-up
31 overweight children, ages 13–17 years
66 overweight children, ages 12–18 years
Coates et al., 1982 [48] Location: Stanford, CA
Mellin et al., 1987 [49] Location: Four sites in northern California
Study Population
Wadden et al., 1990 [47] Location: Philadelphia, PA
Study (Author/Year/Location)
14 weeks, 15-month follow-up
15 weeks with 9-month follow-up
16 weeks with 6 month follow-up
Treatment Duration
D PA B
B
D PA B
Two groups SHAPEDOWN program included 90-minute weekly sessions for 14 weeks including weigh-in, group interaction, and exercise period; control received no intervention
Two groups All subjects attended weekly classes including self-management and weight loss skills; groups distinguished by session attendance: parent or no-parent groups
Three groups All received the Weight Reduction and Pride program including 1000–1500 kcal daily, behavioral counseling, increasing physical activity; groups distinguished by session attendance: child alone, mother–child together, and mother–child separately
Study Design and Components
TABLE 13.1 (continued) Randomized Controlled Design Family-Based and Individual Intervention Trials
Weight, height, relative weight: SHAPEDOWN group significantly reduced relative weight at 3 months (5.9% at 3 months, p < 0.001; –9.9% at 15 months, p < 0.01), but not control group (.3% at 3 months; .1% at 15 months).
Weight, height, %overweight: Parent group reduced 5.1% at 15 weeks and 8.2% at 9-month follow-up. No-parent group reduced %overweight by 8.4% at 15 weeks and 9-month follow-up.
Weight, height, BMI, body fat by hydrostatic weighing: Weight was significantly reduced in all groups: child alone (1.6 kg), mother–child together (3.7 kg) and mother–child separately (3.1 kg) at 16 weeks. Body fat decreased equally in all subjects (from mean of 37.1 to 35.1 kg; p < 0.001). Child alone group increased weight from baseline by 3.0 kg, mother–child together by 1.7 kg, and mother–child separately by 3.5 kg at 6-month follow-up. BMI was not significantly different from baseline in subjects combined. Subjects whose mothers regularly attended treatment sessions lost twice as much weight as those with poor attendance.
Outcome Variables and Findings
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44 overweight adolescents, ages 12–16 years
50 of 60 obese children attended; 7-year follow-up
77 families with obese children ages 6–12 years; 67 at follow-up
77 families with obese children; 49 at follow-up
Location: Cincinnati, OH
Golan and Crow, 2004 [51] Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Epstein et al., 1987 [52] Location: Pittsburgh, PA
Epstein et al., 1987 [53] Location: Pittsburgh, PA
Saelens et al., 2002 [50]
14 sessions over 8 months, 5-year follow-up
14 sessions over 8 months, 21- and 60-month follow-up.
Sessions dependent on group assignment, 7-year follow-up
14–16 weeks with 7-month follow-up
D PA B
D PA B
D PA B
D B PA SA
Three groups Traffic Light Diet, Cooper aerobic point system, behavior modification for all groups: parent–child, child alone, or nonspecific target (control); nonparticipating siblings were evaluated at baseline and 5 years
Three groups Traffic Light Diet, aerobic exercise, and behavior modification for all groups: parent/child target, child target, or nonspecific target (control)
Two groups 1500-calorie diet, cognitive restructuring, eating behavior modification, exercise for all participants; parent only: attended four weekly, four biweekly, and six every 6 weeks educational group sessions; child only: attended seven weekly sessions, then biweekly sessions for the remainder of 1 year
Two groups Behavioral weight control: eight weekly and three biweekly telephone contact sessions 10–20 minutes each, instructed to self-monitor food intake and physical activity; typical care: one physician counseling session
Height, weight, %overweight: Significantly greater %overweight decrease for nonparticipating siblings in parent–child group compared with nonparticipating siblings in child-alone and control groups at 5 years (p < 0.038).
%overweight, weight, height: %overweight decrease in children in parent–child group (12.7%), but increased in child-only (4.3%) and control groups (8.2%) at 5-year follow-up.
Weight, height, %overweight: Weight loss of children in parent-only group significant (13.6%) at 1 year (p < 0.05). %overweight reduction in children in parent-only group (15%) at year 2 (p < 0.01). %overweight reduction 29% in the parent-only group, and 20.2% in the child-only group at 7 years (p < 0.05).
Weight, height, BMI: Typical care group significantly increased mean BMI z-scores (1.1) compared with decrease in BMI z-score for treatment group (.1) during intervention.
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Study Population
39 families with obese children, ages 8–12 years
33 families with overweight children, ages 8–12 years; 20 at follow-up
22 families with overweight girls, ages 8–12 years
16 obese adolescents, ages 13–21 years
Study (Author/Year/Location)
Epstein et al., 1994 [54] Location: Pittsburgh, PA
Israel et al., 1985 [55] Location: Albany, NY
Epstein et al., 1985 [56] Location: Pittsburgh, PA
Ebbeling et al., 2003 [57] Location: Boston, MA 6 months (12 sessions), 1-year follow-up
8 weekly intensive and 10 monthly maintenance sessions
9 weekly sessions, 1-year follow-up
26 weekly and 6 monthly sessions, 2-year follow-up
Treatment Duration
D PA B
D PA B
D PA B
D PA B
Two groups Exercise and behavioral counseling for both groups: reduced glycemic load diet or reduced fat diet
Two groups Traffic Light Diet, aerobic exercise program, behavioral change techniques; child and parents treated separately in diet only and diet plus 6 weeks of structured exercise conditions
Three groups Weight-reduction program for weightreduction-only and parent-training groups; parent-training treatment preceded by parent-only courses; wait list control group
Two groups Traffic Light Diet, lifestyle exercise, and behavioral principles; experimental group: diet, exercise, weight loss, parenting skills; control: behavior change only
Study Design and Components
TABLE 13.1 (continued) Randomized Controlled Design Family-Based and Individual Intervention Trials
Fat mass by DEXA, BMI: BMI (p < 0.03) and fat mass by DEXA (p < 0.02) decreased in the low–glycemic load diet group after 12 months, but not in the control, low-fat diet group.
Weight, height, %overweight: Both groups reduced weight and %overweight significantly (p < 0.01) at 2 and 6 months. Only diet plus exercise reduced weight significantly (p < 0.01) at 12 months; both groups reduced %overweight at 12 months (p < 0.01).
Height, weight, triceps skinfold: At 9 weeks, children in weight-reduction-only group had significantly greater decreases in %overweight compared with parent-training group (p < 0.025). Children in parent-traiuning group had significantly greater decreases in %overweight when compared with control (p < 0.01) at 9 weeks. At 1 year, children in the weight-reduction-only group significantly increased %overweight (p < 0.001).
Weight, height, %overweight: Experimental group experienced significantly greater decrease in %overweight at 6 months and 1 year (p < 0.05). No difference was seen between the groups at 2 years.
Outcome Variables and Findings
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663 prepubertal overweight children, ages 8–10 years; 623 completed treatment, 580 at 7-year follow-up
41 obese children, ages 8–12 years; 33 at follow-up
Obarzanek et al., 2001 [75] Locations: Baltimore, MD; Chicago, IL; Iowa City, IA; Newark, NJ; New Orleans, LA; Portland, OR
Epstein et al., 1987 [76] Location: Pittsburgh, PA 8 weekly sessions, 10 monthly sessions, 5-year follow-up
3 years with 7-year follow-up
6 months (16 weekly sessions, 2 biweekly, 2 monthly)
D PA B
D B
D PA SA B
Two groups 1200-kcal diet for both groups: parent control or child self-control.
Two groups Dietary behavioral intervention: group and individual sessions, diet- and family-based treatment, personalized counseling based on social learning theory and social action theory; usual care: educational publications provided
Four groups Groups varied targeted behaviors (sedentary behaviors vs. physical activity) and treatment dose (low vs. high). All participants given Traffic Light Diet and taught positive reinforcement techniques.
%overweight: changes were not significantly different for groups at 6 months or 1, 3, or 5 years.
BMI was not significantly different between groups; the primary aim of the study was to reduce low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, not adiposity.
Height, weight, BMI, fat-free body mass, %overweight: significant (p < 0.001) decreases in %overweight observed from baseline to 6 months. No significant differences in the rate of change by group were observed for any anthropometric or fitness measure.
Note: BMI = body mass index, D = dietary intervention, PA = physical activity intervention, SA = sedentary activity intervention, B = behavioral intervention
90 families with obese children, ages 8–12
Epstein et al., 2000 [58] Location: Pittsburgh, PA
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Study Population
50 overweight children, ages 7–17 years
68 obese children, ages 5–18 years; 56 completed 1-year follow-up
177 obese children, 6–16 years; 25 obese children matched for age (controls)
69 children, ages 8–12 and their parents
Study (Author/Year/Location)
Brown et al., 2000 [59] Location: New Orleans, LA
Chen et al., 1997 [60] Location: Taiwan
Eliakim et al., 2002 [61] Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Israel, 1984 [62] Location: Albany, NY
9 weekly 90-minute sessions
3 or 6 months
Six sessions (three weekly, three biweekly), with a 1-year follow-up
Weekly 2-hour sessions for 10 weeks
Treatment Duration
D PA B
D PA SA B
D PA B
D PA B
Participants seen in groups of 4–6 families. Parents chose two conditions: engage in concurrent weight loss efforts with their children or serve as only a helper to children’s weight loss efforts. Treatment based on CAIR approach (cue control rules, activity, intake, rewards).
Subjects assigned to a weightmanagement program including dietary counseling (monthly) and exercise (twice weekly); intervention was tailored to age; 1200–2000-kcal diet, reinforcements to increase physical activity and decrease sedentary behaviors
Weight-reduction program, focusing on parental/family involvement, that included the five-lamp diet, 25% reduction in energy intake, lifestyle exercise, and behavioral modification
Weight-reduction program including: protein-sparing modified fast diet or balanced hypocaloric diet (based on initial weight status), moderateintensity progressive exercise, and behavior modification based on social cognitive therapy
Study Design and Components
Weight, %overweight, triceps skinfold; no significant differences were found for within-treatment effects or follow-up effects.
Weight, height, BMI, BMI percentile: Weight was significantly reduced from 55.8 to 54.9 kg; BMI from 26.1 to 25.4 at 3 months; weight (0.50 kg; p < 0.05) and BMI (1.07; p < 0.01) reduced significantly greater at 6 months in treatment subjects; control significantly increased body weight at 3 months (54.2–55.8 kg) and at 6 months (+3.23 kg) and BMI at 3 months (25.2–25.6 kg/m2) and (+0.17 kg/m2) at 6 months (p < 0.005).
Weight for length index (WLI): Mean WLI declined (p < 0.0001); 97% of participants were below baseline WLI at end of treatment, and 80% were below baseline WLI 1 year after treatment.
Weight, height, %overweight: Both Caucasian and African-American subjects reduced weight and %IBW significantly at 10 weeks (p < 0.0001).
Outcome Variables and Findings
TABLE 13.2 Family-Based and Individual Intervention Trials, Non-Randomized Design or Randomization Not Specified
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24 families with obese children, 9–12 years of age; 15 completed treatment
48 obese and 29 nonobese children, ages 6–16 years
32 obese children, ages 6–15
48 obese children, ages 6–15
57 overweight African-American girls, ages 11–17 years
Levine et al., 2001 [63] Location: Pittsburgh, PA
Nuutinen and Knip, 1992 [64] Location: Finland
Nuutinen & Knip, 1992 [65] Location: Finland
Nuutinen & Knip, 1992 [66] Location: Finland
Resnicow et al., 2000 [67] Location: Four inner-city housing projects
2 years
2 years
2 years
12 months with 5-year follow-up
10–12 sessions, follow-up at 4–13 months (mean 7.8 months)
D PA SA B
D B
D B
D PA B
D PA SA B
Nonrandomized, noncontrolled weight-reduction program involving four 6-month sessions targeting food intake, decreased television viewing, and increased physical activity
Three groups: Groups differed by individual (Group I) or group treatment (Group II) of patients. Group II treated conventionally in a school healthcare setting. Group I received dietary counseling with a nutritionist. Group II also received 7 behavioral modification sessions.
Two groups: Groups differed by individual (Group I) or group treatment (Group II) of patients. Group I received dietary counseling with a nutritionist. Group II also received 7 behavioral modification sessions.
Three groups: Individual counseling, group sessions using behavior counseling, and standard school health setting
Family-based weight-reduction program using the Traffic Light Diet, with reinforcements to increase exercise and decrease sedentary behaviors
BMI, two-site skinfolds, percentage body fat (DEXA): High attenders and low attenders (attended <50% sessions) were compared (due to absence of a control group), and no differences were detected.
Weight, height, relative weight, skinfolds: At 1 year, those children who achieved their weight (p < 0.05) and less lean body mass (p < 0.05).
Weight, height, relative weight, skinfolds: relative body weight decreased 16.6% in Group I (p < 0.001) and 15.8% in Group II (p < 0.01).
Weight, height, relative weight, skinfolds: Groups did not differ significantly in relative weight at 5 years; only 14 children maintained 10% reduction in relative weight at 5 years (p < 0.001).
Weight, BMI, percentage ideal body weight: Significant amount of weight loss during treatment (2.5 kg, P = .01); similar declines in BMI (P = .003) and %IBW (P = .007). BMI did not change significantly from pretreatment through follow-up (p = .19).
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73 obese children, ages 7–17 years; 48 completed entire program
50 overweight children, ages 7–17 years, 29 girls, 21 boys
67 overweight children, ages 7–17 years; 32 completed 1 year
Sothern et al., 2000 [69] Location: New Orleans, LA
Sothern et al., 2000 [70] Location: New Orleans, LA
Study Population
Sothern et al., 1999 [68] Location: New Orleans, LA
Study (Author/Year/Location)
10 weekly 2-hour sessions, 1-year follow-up
Weekly 2-hour sessions for 10 weeks
Phases vary by treatment, 1-year follow-up
Treatment Duration
D PA B
D PA B
D PA B
Multidisciplinary weight-management program of aerobic exercise alone or aerobic exercise plus resistance training, with protein-sparing modified fast diet and behavior modification
Treatment included protein-sparing modified fast diet, home-based exercise program, and behavior modification based on social cognitive therapy (Committed to Kids and Trim Kids approach).
Three groups: phase I (30 weeks) for severely obese, phase II (20 weeks) for moderately obese, phase III (10 weeks) for mildly obese, phase IV “maintenance” phase; protein-sparing modified fast diet, behavior modification, and progressive exercise program used
Study Design and Components
Weight, height, %IBW, BMI, percentage fat by skinfolds (resistance training only): BMI and %IBW decreased significantly at 10 weeks and 1 year in both groups (p < 0.0001); weight was significantly lower at 10 weeks in both groups but only in resistance training group at 1 year (p < 0.001); in resistance training subjects, percentage body fat decreased significantly at 10 weeks and at 1 year (p < 0.0001).
Weight, height, BMI, %IBW, percentage fat by skinfolds: Both males and females reduced weight (females p < 0.05, males p < 0.0004), %IBM (p < 0.0001 for both), and BMI (females p < 0.01, males p < 0.0001) significantly from baseline to 10 weeks.
Weight, %IBW, BMI, relative fat (%), and fat-free mass (using skinfolds): Body weight, %IBW, BMI, and percentage fat decreased significantly in all three groups by 10 weeks compared with baseline (p < 0.001). Percentage fat, BMI, and %IBW remained decreased at 52-week follow-up (p < 0.001).
Outcome Variables and Findings
TABLE 13.2 (continued) Family-Based and Individual Intervention Trials, Non-Randomized Design or Randomization Not Specified
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93 adolescents ages 13.1–17.7 years; 56 completed study
107 obese children
50 obese children, ages 7–17
Sothern et al., 2002 [72] Location: New Orleans, LA
Spieth et al., 2000 [73] Location: Boston, MA
Suskind, 1993 [74] Location: New Orleans, LA
1 year (10-week cohorts)
4 months
Weekly 2-hour sessions for 12 months
Weekly 2-hour sessions for 12 months
D PA B
D PA SA B
D PA B
D PA B
Height, weight, %overweight, BMI: An average weight loss of 9 kg was observed in 40 subjects who completed the program and weight maintenance observed at 26 weeks.
Weight, height, BMI: BMI was reduced significantly by 1.53 in the LGI diet group compared with 0.06 in the RF group (p < 0.001); weight changes were similar, 2.03 kg in LGI vs. +1.31 kg in RF (p < 0.01).
Comprehensive medical evaluation, dietary and lifestyle counseling (increase activity, decrease sedentary behavior), and low–glycemic index (LGI) diet or reduced-fat (RF) diet based on food guide pyramid; problem-focused behavior therapy, if needed Participants stratified by obesity: severely obese, moderately obese, mildly obese. All received dietary and behavior modification intervention
Weight, height, %overweight, BMI: Subjects reduced BMI from 32.3 to 29.3 and percentage IBW from 177% to 156% at 10 weeks. BMI was further reduced to 28.2 and %IBW to 141.9% at 1 year (p < 0.001).
Weight, height, %IBW, percentage fat by skinfolds: Weight (9.4 kg), %IBW (25.6%), and percentage fat (7.3%) reduced significantly at 10 weeks compared with baseline (p < 0.0001); weight (6 kg), %IBW (20.2%), BMI (3.9), and percentage fat (9.1%) reduced significantly at 1 year compared with baseline (p < 0.0001).
Protein-modified fast diet or hypocaloric diet (based on initial weight status), moderate-intensity progressive exercise, and behavior modification for all participants
Very low calorie diet, home-based exercise program (tailored to severity of obesity), and family behavior modification based on social cognitive therapy (Committed to Kids and Trim Kids approach)
Note: D = dietary intervention, PA = physical activity intervention, SA = sedentary activity intervention, B = behavioral intervention; %IBW = .
56 overweight children, ages 7–17 years; 52 completed intervention, 35 completed 1 year
Sothern et al., 2000 [71] Location: New Orleans, LA
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Of the 49 studies reviewed for this chapter, two controlled studies and four of other design used group treatment approaches without a family-based counseling component (e.g., parental involvement) [45,46,64–67]. The two randomized controlled studies demonstrated that adolescents receiving diet and exercise interventions significantly decrease body weight or percentage fat compared with an obese control group. In one of the studies of other design, Nuutinen and Knip demonstrated significant reductions in body weight among children ages 6 to 16 years with weight maintenance effects at 5 years posttreatment [64].
WEIGHT MAINTENANCE The effects of maintaining weight loss after the end of intensive treatment are promising. McLean et al. identified eight randomized clinical trials of children and adolescents with 1-year follow-up data that included a family involvement component [19]. Studies in children under the age of 13 years have consistently illustrated significant reductions in weight status over 6-month to 2-year time periods when parents were included in behavioral counseling. Several randomized controlled family-based trials and one controlled, clinical observation [16–18,34,51–53,64,77] have demonstrated maintenance of reductions in adiposity over 5 to 10 years. Specifically, in a study of longterm maintenance effects, Epstein and colleagues have followed the effects of an intensive weight loss program over a 10-year period [17]. This randomized controlled design examined the effects of a family-based behavioral treatment program on weight and growth across a 10-year period in obese 6 to 12 year olds. Children and their parents were randomized to one of three experimental groups. Each was provided similar diet, exercise, and behavior management skills training. However, the groups differed in reinforcement for weight loss and behavior change. Specifically, the child-and-parent condition reinforced both the parent’s and child’s weight loss and behavior change. The child-only condition reinforced only the child’s weight loss and behavior change. The nonspecific control group reinforced families for attendance. Children in the child-and-parent condition demonstrated significantly greater decreases in percent overweight after 5 and 10 years compared with children in the nonspecific control group (e.g., 11.2% and 7.5% at 5 and 10 years, respectively, compared with +7.9% and +14.3%). The child-only group showed increases in percentage overweight after 5 and 10 years (+2.7% and +4.5%); however weight changes were not statistically different from the other two groups. Notably, at 10 years, there were no differences in height between groups. In another study, children had significantly lower percentage of overweight and triceps skinfolds at 6 months. However, at 3-year follow-up, weight reductions were not maintained [41]. Interestingly, a 3-year study focusing on improvement in lipid profiles, with weight loss as a secondary outcome measure, showed no significant changes in adiposity at 7-year follow-up [33,75].
ADOLESCENTS Few studies focused solely on adolescents have been conducted. There are two randomized controlled trials that evaluated family-based therapy in adolescents 12 years of age and older [44,47]. Brownell and colleagues reported that weight loss was significantly greater in older youth (i.e., 12 to 16 years) who participated in counseling separate from parents than in those treated together with parents or treated alone [44]. Specifically, this study was a 16-month controlled trial that examined weight and blood pressure changes among three methods that involved mothers in the treatment. The treatments were (1) Mother–Child Separately, in which the adolescents and their mothers attended separate groups; (2) Mother–Child Together, in which the children and mothers were in the same group; and (3) Child Alone, in which the children met in groups alone and without any mother involvement. Techniques included in the program were nutritional education, exercise, social support, and behavior modification. The Mother–Child Separately group lost more weight during treatment than the other two groups, and differences between the groups increased at 1-year follow-up. Brownell and colleagues suggested that with adolescents, a program of behavior modification and parent
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involvement could lead to significant weight losses. However, the nature of parent involvement may be a critical component. Wadden and colleagues investigated the efficacy of a behavioral weight control program in overweight African-American female adolescents [47]. All adolescents participated in the same 16-week program; however, they differed with regard to level of parent participation (e.g., childalone, mother-and-child treated together, and mother and child treated separately). Adolescents in all three conditions lost weight. However, there were no statistical differences among conditions. Interestingly, results revealed that the greater the number of sessions attended by mothers, the greater their daughters’ weight loss. Coates and others evaluated the effect of a group multidisciplinary weight loss program for adolescents aged 13 to 17 years [48]. Teenagers were assigned to either a parent or a no-parent participation group. All of the classes incorporated weight loss training and self-management skills. In the parent participation group, parents learned skills for assisting their children in losing weight. The parent participation group showed the greater decreases in percentage above ideal weight, suggesting that parent participation enhanced the weight loss of adolescents at 15 weeks. However, at 9-month follow-up, weight loss was similar between the groups, with no significant differences.
COMPONENT ANALYSIS
OF
BEHAVIORAL TECHNIQUES
Most weight loss studies in the clinical environment have not evaluated the independent impact that a particular behavioral technique may have on adiposity reduction. Only two studies have systematically assessed the separate influence that a specified behavioral technique (e.g., problemsolving) had on weight loss compared with other techniques. The independent contribution of problem solving–skills training among 6- to 12-year-old children enrolled in a multi-disciplinary weight management intervention (e.g., “the Traffic Light Diet,” self-monitoring, stimulus control, cognitive restructuring, diet and exercise information, family support, peer relations, games and stories, and maintenance strategies) was examined [32]. The inclusion of problem-solving techniques to the intervention significantly improved weight loss and maintenance of weight loss at 3 and 6 months follow-up. Interestingly, Epstein and colleagues found no significant differences between groups when problem solving was added to their behavioral interventions after 6 months. However, in the problem solving plus parent-and-child intervention, BMI was significantly lower than the child-only problem solving and no problem solving groups at 24-month follow-up.
SUMMARY All of these family-based counseling studies consistently demonstrated reductions in weight posttreatment and at follow-up. Evidence is limited in older children; however, family-based counseling may result in significant adiposity reductions.
PARENT TRAINING OR MODELING INTERVENTIONS Parent training or modeling is often an integral part of a family-based counseling clinical intervention. Thirty randomized clinical trials and 12 studies of other design were identified that included parental involvement, training, or modeling in the counseling interventions. Nineteen studies of randomized design examined child-only versus parent-only interventions, or child-only versus parent and child combined counseling. The results of the studies are fairly consistent. Parent-only or parent-plus-child interventions are typically superior to child-only interventions on weight reductions in children. However, there are three exceptions. Specifically, Kirschenbaum and colleagues found nonsignificant differences at 9 weeks and at 3- and 12-month follow-up among 9- to 13-year-old children participating in parent-plus-child versus child-only group interventions [42]. In another study of 12- to 16-year-old African-American adolescents, Wadden and colleagues found
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no significant differences when adolescents participated in counseling alone, with their mothers, or when the mothers and adolescents were seen separately [47]. Epstein and colleagues found no difference in weight loss at 1 year among 6- to 12-year-old children who participated in a child self-control condition versus those who participated in a parent self-control condition [36]. Interestingly, only those children with overweight parents reduced weight status significantly.
WEIGHT MAINTENANCE Epstein and colleagues have published a series of findings demonstrating the importance of parent training or modeling in child weight management. In a long-term study by Epstein and others, weight maintenance was superior among children whose parents participated in the intervention program versus those children treated alone [17]. In another study, weight loss of children compared with that of their parents after 6 months and at 10 years was evaluated [34]. Results were limited by the absence of control groups; however, children maintained the original weight reductions, whereas parents did not. Interestingly, Eliakim et al. examined the influence that parental overweight had in the maintenance of weight loss in a sample of overweight children between the ages of 6 and 16 years [61]. Children with normal-weight parents maintained their original weight loss better than those with either one or two overweight parents. This finding demonstrates the importance of parental contribution in the ability of overweight children to maintain initial weight loss.
PARENTS
AS THE
FOCUS
OF
TREATMENT
Parents as a focus of treatment have been noted in a few studies. Several studies by Epstein and colleagues [16,52–54,76] targeted both the parent and the child for weight loss. Typically, both the parent and the child contracted for weight loss and had contingencies placed on them for successful weight loss. In a study by Golan and colleagues, enhanced weight loss occurred when the parents, as opposed to the overweight children, were targeted with nutritional education and counseling [31]. However, generalizations from this study should be made with caution because there was a high drop-out rate in the control groups. Interestingly, 7-year follow-up data revealed that mean reductions in percentage overweight were significantly greater in the parent condition compared with the childonly condition [51]. Additionally, parental overweight [61] and parental attempts at concurrent weight loss [62] have been found to significantly influence weight-loss maintenance efforts in children.
SUMMARY In summary, all 42 intervention studies that incorporated parental involvement, training, or modeling showed positive changes in child weight status. Three studies in younger children and one in adolescents demonstrated no difference in weight reduction between child-only versus child-plusparent interventions. Family-based counseling that incorporates parent training or modeling as part of a clinical intervention program results in significant weight reductions in preadolescent children. Therefore, sufficient evidence exists to recommend parent training and modeling techniques as part of weight-management programs for children. Parent training or modeling for adolescent-based interventions has shown inconsistent and inconclusive results. Thus, whether parent training or modeling in overweight adolescents should be recommended needs further investigation.
INDIVIDUAL TREATMENT APPROACHES There is a dearth of data available on individual treatment for obesity in children and adolescents in a nongroup format. Saelens and colleagues evaluated the efficacy of a 4-month-long behavioral weight control intervention in a primary care setting with extended follow-up through telephone and mail contact [50]. Specifically, overweight adolescents were randomly assigned to either a multiple-component behavioral weight control intervention (e.g., physical activity education and
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nutritional education) or a single session of physician weight counseling (usual care). Notably, participant satisfaction and behavioral skills use were also measured. Adolescents receiving the multiple-component intervention demonstrated a better change in BMI than did adolescents receiving usual care. Adolescents in the treatment condition demonstrated higher use of behavioral skills, and higher behavioral skills use was related to better weight outcome. The results revealed that a physician-based, individual counseling program that included physical activity education and nutritional education was superior to a usual care approach in overweight teenagers. Furthermore, this study suggests that innovative delivery approaches (e.g., telephone contacts and mailed materials) may improve weight management skills in an adolescent overweight population. In another randomized study of adolescents, Ebbeling and colleagues [57] evaluated the effects of a reduced–glycemic load diet compared with an energy-restricted, reduced-fat diet. The study yielded significant reductions in fat mass and BMI for both diet conditions. However, the glycemic load diet condition resulted in significantly lower decreases in fat mass and BMI compared with the reduced fat diet at 12-month follow-up.
SUMMARY Overall, family-based behavioral counseling is shown to be an effective method for changing eating and activity patterns in overweight children in clinical settings. Diet, exercise/ physical activity, and behavioral counseling are common components of efficacious studies of family-based weight loss interventions in children younger than 13 years of age. These studies demonstrate that the inclusion of the family in counseling sessions (e.g., targeting the parent) improves both short-term and long-term weight outcomes. Parental education is strongly recommended, particularly if the parents are obese. Weight losses appear to be similar regardless of which dietary counseling approach is implemented. The health benefits of family-based weight management programs in a clinical environment are well established in 9- to 12-year-old overweight children. Specifically, benefits in lipid profiles and body composition have been documented in these children 10 years posttreatment. Therefore, there is sufficient evidence to support recommending family-based counseling in children under 12 years of age. The majority of studies in children over the age of 12 years indicate that group behavioral approaches focused on nutritional and physical activity education are most effective. However, family-based interventions and long-term studies in adolescents are lacking and have shown inconsistent results. There is mixed evidence to support recommending family-based, group behavioral counseling in children over the age of 12 years. Specifically, it is unclear whether parents and adolescents should be provided behavioral counseling alone or together. Therefore, there is a need for individualized, age-appropriate, overweight treatment programs for adolescents.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT The authors would like to thank Brooke L. Barbera for her hard work and attention to detail in preparation of this chapter.
REFERENCES 1. Falkner B, Michel S. Obesity and other risk factors in children. Ethn Dis. 1999;9(2):284–289. 2. Hill J, Throwbridge F. The causes and health consequences of obesity in children and adolescents. Pediatrics. 1998;101(3):497–575. 3. Rippe JM, Hess S. The role of physical activity in the prevention and management of obesity. J Amer Diet Assoc. 1998;98(10 Suppl 2):S31–S38.
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4. Zannolli R, Rebeggiani A, Chiarelli F, Morgese G. Hyperinsulinism as a marker in obese children. Amer J Dis Children. 1993;147(8):837–841. 5. Witchel SF, Smith R, Tomboc M, Aston CE. Candidate gene analysis in premature pubarche and adolescent hyperandrogenism. Fertil Steril. 2001;75(4):724–730. 6. Bideci A, Cinaz P, Hasanoglu A, Elbeg S. Serum levels of insulin-like growth factor-I and insulin-like growth factor binding protein-3 in obese children. J Pediatr Endocrinol Metabol. 1997;10(3):295–299. 7. Must A. Morbidity and mortality associated with elevated body weight in children and adolescents. Amer J Clin Nutr. 1996;63(3 Suppl):445S–447S. 8. Tershakovec AM, Weller SC, Gallagher PR. Obesity, school performance and behaviour of black, urban elementary school children. Intl J Obes Rel Metabol Disord. 1994;18(5):323–327. 9. Latner JD, Stunkard AJ. Getting worse: the stigmatization of obese children. Obes Res. 2003;11(3):452–456. 10. Strauss RS, Pollack HA. Social marginalization of overweight children. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2003;157(8):746–752. 11. Bouchard C. Obesity in adulthood — the importance of childhood and parental obesity. New Engl J Med. 1997;337(13):926–927. 12. Whitaker RC, Wright JA, Pepe MS, Seidel KD, Dietz WH. Predicting obesity in young adulthood from childhood and parental obesity. New Engl J Med. 1997;337(13):869–873. 13. Simic B. Childhood obesity is a risk factor in adulthood. In: Collip PJ, Ed. Childhood Obesity. 2nd ed. Littleton, MA: PSG Publishing; 1980. 14. Dietz W. Childhood Obesity. In: Cheung L, Richmand J, Eds. Child Health Nutrition and Physical Activity. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics; 1995. 15. Crawford P, Sothern M, Riche L, Hoest, D. Evidence-based analysis of childhood overweight prevention and treatment programs: a position paper for the American Dietetic Association. J Amer Diet Assoc. In press. 16. Epstein LH, Wing RR, Koeske R, Andrasik F, Ossip DJ. Child and parent weight loss in family-based behavior modification programs. J Consult Clin Psychol. 1981;49(5):674–685. 17. Epstein LH, Valoski A, Wing RR, McCurley J. Ten-year follow-up of behavioral, family-based treatment for obese children. JAMA. 1990;264(19):2519–2523. 18. Epstein LH, Valoski A, Wing RR, McCurley J. Ten-year outcomes of behavioral family-based treatment for childhood obesity. Health Psychol. 1994;13(5):373–383. 19. McLean N, Griffin S, Toney K, Hardeman W. Family involvement in weight control, weight maintenance and weight-loss interventions: a systematic review of randomised trials. Intl J Obes. 2003;27:987–1005. 20. St Jeor ST, Perumean-Chaney S, Sigman-Grant M, Williams C, Foreyt JP. Family-based interventions for the treatment of childhood obesity. J Amer Diet Assoc. 2002;102(5):639–644. 21. Nutzinger DO, Cayiroglu S, Sachs G, Zapotoczky HG. Emotional problems during weight reduction: advantages of a combined behavior therapy and antidepressive drug therapy for obesity. J Behav Therap Exper Psychiatr. 1985;16(3):217–221. 22. Brownell KD, Kramer FM. Behavioral management of obesity. Med Clin N Amer. 1989;73:185–201. 23. Foreyt JP, Goodrick GK. Impact of behavior therapy on weight loss. Amer J Health Promotion. 1994;8(6):466–468. 24. Epstein LH, Wing RR, Steranchak L, Dickson B, Michelson J. Comparison of family-based behavior modification and nutrition education for childhood obesity. J Pediatr Psychol. 1980;5(1):25–36. 25. Johnson WG, Hinkle LK, Carr RE, Anderson DA, Lemmon CR, Engler LB, Bergeron KC. Dietary and exercise interventions for juvenile obesity: long-term effect of behavioral and public health models. Obes Res. 1997;5(3):257–261. 26. Wadden TA, Sarwer DB, Berkowitz RI. Behavioural treatment of the overweight patient. Bailliere’s best practice and research. Clin Endocrinol Metabol. 1999;13(1):93–107. 27. Poston WSC, Hyder ML, O’Byrne KK, Foreyt JP. Where do diets, exercise, and behavior modification fit in the treatment of obesity? Endocrine. 2000;13(2):187–192. 28. Foreyt JP, Poston WSC. The role of the behavioral counselor in obesity treatment. J Amer Diet Assoc. 1998;10(Suppl 2):S27–S30. 29. Foreyt JP, Poston WSC. What is the role of cognitive-behavior therapy in patient management? Obes Res. 1998;6(Suppl 1):18S–22S.
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30. Foster GD, Wadden TA, Vogt RA, Brewer G. What is a reasonable weight loss? Patients’ expectations and evaluations of obesity treatment outcomes. J Consult Clinl Psychol. 1997;65:79–85. 31. Golan M, Weizman A, Apter A, Fainaru M. Parents as the exclusive agents of change in the treatment of childhood obesity. Amer J Clin Nutr. 1998;67:1130–1135. 32. Graves T, Meyers AW, Clark L. An evaluation of parental problem-solving training in the behavioral treatment of childhood obesity. J Consult Clin Psychol. 1988;56(2):246–250. 33. The Writing Group for the Dietary Intervention Study in Children (DISC) Collaborative Research Group. Efficacy and safety of lowering dietary intake of fat and cholesterol in children with elevated low-density lipoprotein cholesterol. JAMA. 1995;273(18):1429–1435. 34. Epstein LH, Valoski AM, Kalarchian MA, McCurley J. Do children lose and maintain weight easier than adults: a comparison of child and parent weight changes from six months to ten years. Obes Res. 1995;3(5):411–417. 35. Epstein LH, Paluch RA, Raynor HA. Sex differences in obese children and siblings in family-based obesity treatment. Obes Res. 2001;9(12):746–753. 36. Epstein LH, Wing RR, Koeske R, Valoski A. Effect of parent weight on weight loss in obese children. J Consult Clin Psychol. 1986;54:400–401. 37. Epstein LH, Wing RR, Koeske R, Valoski A. Effects of diet plus exercise on weight change in parents and children. J Consult Clin Psychol. 1984;52(3):429–437. 38. Epstein L, Wing R, Koeske R, Valoski A. A comparison of lifestyle exercise, aerobic exercise, and calisthenics on weight loss in obese children. Behav Ther. 1985;16:345–356. 39. Epstein LH, Valoski AM, Vara LS, McCurley J, Wisniewski L, Kalarchian MA et al. Effects of decreasing sedentary behavior and increasing activity on weight change in obese children. Health Psychol. 1995;14(2):109–115. 40. Epstein LH, Paluch RA, Gordy CC, Saelens BE, Ernst MM. Problem solving in the treatment of childhood obesity. J Consult Clin Psychol. 2000;68(4):717–721. 41. Israel AC, Guile CA, Baker JE, Silverman WK. An evaluation of enhanced self-regulation training in the treatment of childhood obesity. J Pediatr Psychol. 1994;19(6):737–749. 42. Kirschenbaum DS, Harris ES, Tomarken AJ. Effects of parental involvement in behavioral weight loss therapy for preadolescents. Behav Ther. 1984;15:485–500. 43. Flodmark C-E, Ohlsson T, Ryden O, Sveger T. Prevention of progression to severe obesity in a group of obese schoolchildren treated with family therapy. Pediatrics. 1993;91(5):880–885. 44. Brownell KD, Kelman JH, Stunkard AJ. Treatment of obese children with and without their mothers: changes in weight and blood pressure. Pediatrics. 1983;71:515–523. 45. Becque MD, Katch VL, Rocchini AP, Marks CR, Moorehead C. Coronary risk incidence of obese adolescents: reduction by exercise plus diet intervention. Pediatrics. 1988;81(5):605–612. 46. Rocchini AP, Katch V, Anderson J, Hinderliter J, Becque D, Martin M, Marks C. Blood pressure in obese adolescents: effect of weight loss. Pediatrics. 1988;82(1):16–23. 47. Wadden TA, Stunkard AJ, Rich L, Rubin CJ, Sweidel G, McKinney S. Obesity in black adolescent girls: a controlled clinical trial of treatment by diet, behavior modification, and parental support. Pediatrics. 1990;85(3):345–352. 48. Coates TJ, Kilien JD, Slinkard L. Parent participation in a treatment program for overweight adolescents. Intl J Eating Disord. 1982;1(3):37–49. 49. Mellin LM, Slinkard LA, Irwin CE, Jr. Adolescent obesity intervention: validation of the SHAPEDOWN program. J Amer Diet Assoc. 1987;87(3):333–338. 50. Saelens BE, Sallis JF, Wilfley DE, Patrick K, Cella JA, Buchta R. Behavioral weight control for overweight adolescents initiated in primary care. Obes Res. 2002;10(1):22–32. 51. Golan M, Crow S. Targeting parents exclusively in the treatment of childhood obesity: long-term results. Obes Res. 2004;12(2):357–361. 52. Epstein LH, Wing RR, Koeske R, Valoski A. Long-term effects of family-based treatment of childhood obesity. J Consult Clin Psychol. 1987;55(1):91–95. 53. Epstein LH, Nudelman S, Wing RR. Long-term effects of family-based treatment for obesity on nontreated family members. Behav Ther. 1987;18(2):147–152. 54. Epstein LH, McKenzie SJ, Valoski A, Klein KR, Wing RR. Effects of mastery criteria and contingent reinforcement for family-based child weight control. Addictive Behav. 1994;19(2):135–145.
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55. Israel AC, Stolmaker L, Andrian CA. The effects of training parents in general child management skills on a behavioral weight loss program for children. Behav Ther. 1985;16(2):169–180. 56. Epstein LH, Wing RR, Penner BC, Kress MJ. Effect of diet and controlled exercise on weight loss in obese children. J Pediatr. 1985;107(3):358–361. 57. Ebbeling CB, Leidig MM, Sinclair KB, Hangen JP, Ludwig DS. A reduced-glycemic load diet in the treatment of adolescent obesity. Arch Pediatr Adol Med. 2003;157(8):773–779. 58. Epstein LH, Paluch RA, Gordy CC, Dorn J. Decreasing sedentary behaviors in treating pediatric obesity. Archiv Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2000;154(3):220–226. 59. Brown R, Sothern M, Suskind R, Udall J, Blecker U. Racial differences in the lipid profiles of obese children and adolescents before and after significant weight loss. Clin Pediatr (Phila). 2000;39(7):427–431. 60. Chen W, Chen SC, Hsu HS, Lee C. Counseling clinic for pediatric weight reduction: program formulation and follow-up. J Formosan Med Assoc. 1997;96(1):59–62. 61. Eliakim A, Kaven G, Berger I, Friedland O, Wolach B, Nemet D. The effect of a combined intervention on body mass index and fitness in obese children and adolescents — a clinical experience. Eur J Pediatr. 2002;161(8):449–455. 62. Israel AC, Stolmaker L, Sharp JP, Silverman WK, Simon LG. An evaluation of two methods of parental involvement in treating obese children. Behav Therap. 1984;15:266–272. 63. Levine MD, Ringham RM, Kalarchian MA, Wisniewski L, Marcus MD. Is family-based behavioral weight control appropriate for severe pediatric obesity? Intl J Eating Disord. 2001;30:318–328. 64. Nuutinen O, Knip M. Long-term weight control in obese children: persistence of treatment outcome and metabolic changes. Intl J Obes. 1992;16:279–287. 65. Nuutinen O, Knip M. Weight loss, body composition and risk factors for cardiovascular disease in obese children: long-term effects of two treatment strategies. J Amer Coll Nutr. 1992;11(6):707–714. 66. Nuutinen O, Knip M. Predictors of weight reduction in obese children. Europ J Clin Nutr. 1992;46(11):785–794. 67. Resnicow K, Yaroch AL, Davis A Wang DT, Carter S, Slaughtr L, et al. GO GIRLS! Results from a nutrition and physical activity program for low-income, overweight African American adolescent females. Health Educ Behav. 2000;27(5):616–631. 68. Sothern MS, Hunter S, Suskind RM, Brown R, Udall JN, Blecker U. Motivating the obese child to move: the role of structured exercise in pediatric weight management. South Med J. 1999;92(6):577–584. 69. Sothern MS, Despinasse B, Brown R, Suskind RM, Udall JN Jr., Blecker U. Lipid profiles of obese children and adolescents before and after significant weight loss: differences according to sex. South Med J. 2000;93(3):278–282. 70. Sothern MS, Loftin JM, Udall JN, Suskind RM, Ewing TL, Tang SC, Blecker. Safety, feasibility, and efficacy of a resistance training program in preadolescent obese children. Amer J Med Sci. 2000;319(6):370–375. 71. Sothern, Udall JN, Jr., Suskind RM, Vargas A, Blecker U. Weight loss and growth velocity in obese children after very low calorie diet, exercise, and behavior modification. Acta Paediatr. 2000;89(9):1036–1043. 72. Sothern M, Schumacher H, von Almen K, Carlisle K, Udall J. Committed to kids: an integrated, fourlevel team approach to weight management in adolescents. J Amer Diet Assoc. 2002;102(3):S81–S85. 73. Spieth LE, Harnish JD, Lenders CM, Raezer LB, Pereira MA, Hangen SJ, Ludwig DS. A low-glycemic index diet in the treatment of pediatric obesity. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2000;154(9):947–951. 74. Suskind RM, Sothern MS, Farris RP et al. Recent advances in the treatment of childhood obesity. Ann NY Acad Sci. 1993;699:181–199. 75. Obarzanek E, Kimm SYS, Barton BA et al. Long-term safety and efficacy of a cholesterol-lowering diet in children with elevated low-density lipoprotein cholesterol: seven-year results of the dietary intervention study (DISC). Pediatrics. 2001;107(2):256–264. 76. Epstein LH, Wing RR, Valoski A, Gooding W. Long-term effects of parent weight on child weight loss. Behav Ther. 1987;18:219–226. 77. Epstein L. Methodological issues and ten-year outcomes for obese children. Ann NY Acad Sci. 1993;699:237–249.
Section 7 Exercise and Physical Activity
Physical Activity 14 Increasing in Overweight Youth in Clinical Settings Melinda S. Sothern, Connie VanVrancken-Tompkins, Courtney Brooks, and Camille Thélin CONTENTS Introduction ....................................................................................................................................173 Determinants of Physical Activity .......................................................................................174 Motivational Theories and Models ................................................................................................175 The Theory of Planned Behavior.........................................................................................176 The Health Belief Model .....................................................................................................176 Social Cognitive Theory.......................................................................................................176 Motivational Techniques to Increase Physical Activity ................................................................177 Initial Evaluation ..................................................................................................................177 Music as a Motivational Tool...............................................................................................178 Team (Group) versus Individual Physical Activity..............................................................178 Individualizing Physical Activity Programs.........................................................................178 Application of Social Cognition Theory to Promote Physical Activity in Multidisciplinary Settings ..................................................................................................178 Increasing Daily Energy Expenditures: The Moderate Intensity Progressive Exercise Program Step...........................................................................................179 Muscular Strength & Endurance: The MPEP Pump! (Chapter 20; Appendices A3.1, A3.3).........................................................................................179 Role Modeling ..........................................................................................................181 Summary ........................................................................................................................................184 References ......................................................................................................................................185
INTRODUCTION Unfortunately, today’s American youth exhibit unhealthy lifestyle attitudes and practices toward physical activity [1–3]. Children of all ages are heavier and less active and are thus less physically fit [4–6]. Overweight children are caught in a vicious cycle because excess fat will, in turn, reduce activity because of joint discomfort and distressed breathing [7–9]. Once activity is reduced, body fat will continue to increase, creating even more aversion to exercise. Educational studies indicate that physical fitness improves students’ self image and promotes a positive school environment. Students who are physically fit are shown to be absent less often and illustrate higher academic achievement than nonfit students [10]. Children’s feelings of selfworth or self-esteem begin developing in the early elementary years [11]. Some types of exercise training may improve self-esteem in prepubescent youth [12]. Furthermore, regular physical training 173
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may promote the attainment of self-esteem during the elementary years, which may transfer to improved self-worth in the later, more difficult, pubertal and postpubertal years. Exercise programs must be goal-oriented with easily attainable outcomes to ensure individual student success. Exercise techniques must be appropriate to the physical development level of the student. Because children today are becoming more overweight and less active, it is important to establish baseline information regarding the child’s performance before providing recommendations to increase physical activity or incorporate a structured exercise routine. This is particularly important for overweight children. Childhood is a critical time in which children’s physical activity behaviors are formed and in which they develop healthy attitudes toward physical activity. Physicians and health care professionals should be actively involved in promoting physical activity to their patients [13]. There are several ways physicians and health care professionals can help their patients adopt a healthier and more physically active lifestyle. It is important that physicians and health care professionals take the time to assist their patients in developing physical activity programs, particularly for their overweight or obese patients [14].
DETERMINANTS
OF
PHYSICAL ACTIVITY
Many factors are described as determinants of increased physical activity and adherence to exercise programs. Research conducted over the last decade has produced a vast amount of information concerning known determinants to physical activity adherence [15]. For example, biomedical status has been identified as a personal attribute that affects physical activity adherence. Conditions such as obesity promote resistance to the adoption of regular physical activity. However, research indicates that biomedical status, as a single factor, is not a powerful predictor of human behavior [15]. Environmental factors such as a perceived lack of time have been proposed as primary deterrents to physical activity. Although individuals report a lack of available time for physical activity, other complex issues affect this perception. Poor behavioral skills, that is, limit setting and time management, may contribute more to the lack of opportunity for physical activity, or the individual may lack adequate motivation to be physically active. Lack of time then becomes a perceived determinant as opposed to an environmental one. These fluctuations in context disable the prescription of appropriate physical activity interventions [15–17]. It may be important to observe these physical activity determinants with respect to specific races, genders, ages, and health status or fitness levels, and the different environments and orders in which these occur and interact. Dishman suggests that past physical activity history may be a more reliable predictor of exercise adherence than the individual’s intention to exercise [15]. Measuring self variables, such as perceived competence, self-efficacy, and self-esteem, may describe the psychological benefits associated with physical activity [16]; however, these variables do not predict behavior unless incentives are present or past history is considered [15]. Stucky-Ropp and DiLorenzo [18] explored factors among fifth and sixth graders that influenced their level of physical activity. Child enjoyment of physical activity was the most prominent predictor of exercise behavior. It was found, for both boys and girls, that the mothers’ perception of barriers to exercise and their report of family social support were important predictors as well. On the contrary, only boys reported that the perception of modeling and support of exercise behavior from friends and family was important. In addition, only girls were highly influenced by the number of exerciserelated pieces of equipment at home and parental modeling of exercise. The authors concluded that children are influenced by important socialized family variables. Furthermore, families serve as important learning environments for enhancing health-related behavior, including physical activity, in children. Perhaps targeting families rather than individuals may provide more of a beneficial effect. This has certainly been shown to be effective in multidisciplinary weight management [19–22] Duncan et al. observed similar findings of social support for youth ages 10 to 14 years [23]. A positive correlation was observed with physical activity and youth who received parent, sibling, and friend support. In particular, youth who perceived a greater level of support from friends had
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higher levels of physical activity. Another positive correlation was observed between parents, siblings, and friends watching a game and the youth’s level of physical activity [23]. Taylor et al. examined the relationship between specific components of physical activity during childhood and adolescence and exercise habits in adulthood [24]. An interesting finding was the inverse relationship between adult physical activity and those who were forced to exercise as preteens and during teen years. Also, there was an inverse correlation between adult physical activity and those who were encouraged to exercise during preteen years. These results indicate that being forced and encouraged during childhood may facilitate negative attitudes toward physical activity that may extend into adulthood [24]. Recent research, primarily within sport psychology studies, indicates that the concept described as “flow state” may give insight into factors which enhance the exercise experience [25]. A flow state is achieved during activities that totally absorb the individual. Qualitative descriptions by athletes of this condition indicate that achieving a flow state is an extremely enlightening and positive experience [25]. For the average individual engaged in exercise, achieving a flow state of some magnitude may enhance future exercise adherence. How achieving this state affects formerly sedentary individuals is another question worthy of investigation. Young children are easily distracted and are incapable of focused activity for long periods of time. This contributes to the sporadic nature of their physical activity. Adults can engage in long-duration exercise easily because of their enhanced ability to concentrate. In addition, it may be possible for adults to achieve the semi-trance flow state, which allows them to participate without much mental effort. Although most individuals engage in activity because they enjoy the effort, children need activity to be fun for them to continue. Adults are more able to engage in challenging activities that may be slightly painful to reach performance or aesthetic goals. Young children, in contrast, are not concerned with appearance and are not overly concerned with winning or competition [26–28]. The idea of learned helplessness has been indicated as a probable reason for lack of motivation to participate in healthy behaviors [29]. Learned helplessness is a maladaptive habit of withdrawing from definable, manageable adversities through succumbing to everyday problems [30]. A learned helplessness response is shown by cognitive, motivational, and emotional deficits that follow exposure to uncontrollable events [31]. Learned helpless children justify the causes of bad events in their lives as stable in time, global in effect, and internal to themselves. Such children develop a cluster of helplessness deficiencies. These deficiencies include passivity/nonassertiveness, cognitive flaws/inability to recognize existing opportunities to control outcomes (e.g., unaware or unable to see alternatives), sadness, lowered self-esteem, lowered competitiveness/achievement oriented behaviors, and lack of initiative and persistence [32]. This conclusion is derived from studies reporting that deprived subjects display a sense of personal inadequacy, negative self-image, self-blame, pessimism, low achievement motivation [33], and the expectation of future incompetence compared with nondeprived counterparts. Both children and adults avoid situations that they believe exceed their capabilities and make them feel helpless. They will, however, undertake and perform with self-confidence behaviors they believe they can do, and they will derive benefit. Given appropriate skills and incentives, personal efficacy beliefs are some major determinants of children’s choice of behaviors. Personal efficacy beliefs can help determine how much effort children will expend, and how long they will sustain effort in dealing with uncomfortable or new situations [34]
MOTIVATIONAL THEORIES AND MODELS Modern strategies for chronic disease prevention and treatment include a variety of social learning theories and health promotion models. Many of these theories and models are based on the results of behavioral research. Because diseases related to poor lifestyle choices can be altered by changes in individual behavior patterns, the physician or health care professional should possess a thorough knowledge of these behavioral theories and models [35].
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PLANNED BEHAVIOR
The Theory of Planned Behavior attempts to clarify many of the issues that surround negative behavior patterns [36,37]. Because previous research in human behavior patterns failed to provide good predictors for behavior change, this theory was developed to account for many of the variables associated with alterations in behavior. These variables include individual attitude and disposition and specific personality traits [36]. The Theory of Planned Behavior, using central concepts from the behavioral sciences, provides a framework that allows the understanding and prediction of individual behavior patterns in specific situations and across a wide variety of personality types. This framework moderates the relationship of intention to behavior from perceived behavioral control. For instance, if perceived behavioral control is high, then the intention will convert to behavior. In contrast, if the perceived behavioral control is low, then it is not likely that the intention will convert to behavior [38]. Mummery et al. examined the Theory of Planned Behavior in predicted physical activity in a nationwide sample of Canadian school youth in grades 3, 5, 8, and 11 [39]. Measures included physical activity intention, attitude, subjective norm, and perceived behavioral control. Results of these specific measures explained 47% of the variability in predicting physical activity intention. In particular, perceived behavioral control made the largest contribution to predicting physical activity intention. Conversely, Trost et al. [40] observed that similar components of the Planned Behavior Theory could not account for a substantial portion of the variance in intentions or moderate-to-vigorous physical activity in sixth-grade youths. Further research is needed to determine the role of the Theory of Planned Behavior within the context of diet, physical activity, and obesity in children [38].
THE HEALTH BELIEF MODEL The Health Belief Model is based on the premise that people will perceive the severity and susceptibility of an issue/disease and be motivated to change (also called “readiness to act”). The Health Belief Model has been criticized because it was developed originally with a concern for public health issues. This model has not been received well in the pediatric community because children and adolescents typically perceive themselves as immortal. It is suggested that other outcomes other than disease prevention may motivate individuals to adopt an active lifestyle [38].
SOCIAL COGNITIVE THEORY Bandura suggests that before people alter their current lifestyle to that of a healthy one, they must have a knowledge of health risks associated with their present condition [41]. Because people selfevaluate their behavior, they abstain from behaviors that breed self-dissatisfaction. A challenge facing physicians and health care professionals is helping people believe they can, in fact, adapt a healthier lifestyle and help strengthen their belief in themselves that they do have the power and ability to make these changes. According to Social Cognitive Theory, children are motivated to behave a certain way if they believe that the targeted behavior will benefit them and if they believe that they can do the intended behavior. Self-efficacy beliefs influence goals and shape the outcomes that individuals expect will be produced by their efforts. A person with high self-efficacy usually expects to see favorable results, whereas people with low self-efficacy tend to expect poor outcomes. Those people with low self-efficacy tend to give up easily, whereas those with high self-efficacy tend to overcome difficulties that they may encounter. Chronic disease treatment intervention programs for youth may be enhanced through the application of the training concepts of social cognitive theory. Although individuals may know the health risks associated with negative behaviors, it is selfefficacy that governs whether they will translate that knowledge into a more healthful behavior. For instance, those with low self-efficacy, although aware of the health risks, still will take no
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action, whereas those with high levels of self-efficacy will combine their beliefs with positive outcome expectations. Stated simply, individuals with high levels of self-efficacy believe that the benefits of adapting a healthy lifestyle will outweigh the disadvantages of the lifestyle change. Sonstroem suggests that no matter what model is used to analyze physical activity behaviors, it is vital that it is used repeatedly over time and as a complete and whole intervention [16]. In Chapter 5, Schwimmer provides a detailed summary of other related motivational theories and models.
MOTIVATIONAL TECHNIQUES TO INCREASE PHYSICAL ACTIVITY INITIAL EVALUATION Before prescribing any type of physical activity program, physicians and health care professionals should evaluate their patient’s level of self-efficacy. Those patients with a high level of self-efficacy need minimal guidance and can succeed in changing their behavior in most situations; however, those with little to no self-efficacy beliefs need a great deal of personal guidance and structure. Positive reinforcement and progressive successes will build belief in the patients’ abilities and help with any difficulties or setbacks they may encounter. Because physical activity without caloric restriction may yield only small reductions in weight, particularly in obese patients, physicians and health care professionals should encourage their patients to adjust their dietary habits as well. The physician and health care professional should make aware the benefits of slow, modest weight loss including significant reductions in cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, decrease of fat, increase of muscle mass, and an enhanced sense of psychological well-being [14]. To provide safe exercise guidelines, the American College of Sports Medicine recommends an evaluation of coexisting cardiovascular risk factors or musculoskeletal conditions for patients; however, most overweight or obese patients can begin an exercise program with a gradual increase in physical activity [42,43] In addition to evaluating a patient’s level of self-efficacy, the individual’s readiness to begin a physical activity program should be assessed [44]. The physician or health care professional should consider whether the patient has come to them seeking help and whether they recognize the need for weight loss. The patient’s motivation and stress levels should be assessed and discussed, along with the subject’s relationship with food, as this may warrant other forms of counseling as well. Both the physician or health care professional and the patient should play an active role in developing a physical activity program with activities that the patient feels that he or she can perform successfully. In addition, the physician or health care professional and patient should develop achievable goals together [45]. To achieve greater physical activity compliance, the physician or health care professional should take the time to understand and discuss any social or physical barriers the patient might encounter that would be associated with being physically active. These barriers can include an overweight or obese parent, feeling uncomfortable exercising in public, or thinking that certain exercises have to be painful or extremely vigorous to be beneficial [46]. In promoting physical activity with their patients, physicians or health care professionals should help establish realistic expectations and correct overly pessimistic or optimistic attitudes. Both long- and short-term goals should be established, as well as routine times and places for physical activity. The physician or health care professional should relay the benefits of social support and prepare patients for situations that may present challenges to exercising (i.e., holidays). The patient should develop some sort of contract with the health professional and practice self-reinforcement with rewards [47]. In addition to a physical activity program, daily lifestyle activities should be emphasized as a way to increase overall physical activity levels and energy expenditure [47,48]. Research indicates that children have an intrinsic natural need to be physically active. Young animals, including humans, are inherently active [26]. Therefore, children will be active if given encouragement and opportunity. Childhood activity is often intermittent and sporadic in behavior
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[49]. Thus, children will not likely do prolonged exercise without rest periods. Physical activity patterns vary with children of different developmental and ability levels. Young children may not be attracted to high-intensity sports performance activities; older children may be [27]. The amount of total daily activity (volume) is a good indicator of childhood activity. If given the opportunity, young children will perform relatively large volumes of intermittent physical activity [26,49].
MUSIC
AS A
MOTIVATIONAL TOOL
Priest et al. investigated the presence of music as a motivational tool for exercise [50]. It was found that motivational qualities of music are heightened when the music is delivered at a higher volume and that females reported that music was of higher importance than did males. In addition, the participants reported that the music facilitated their performance on cardiovascular equipment more so than on any other equipment. The researchers also found an effect of music compared with age. Whereas older adults (36 to 45 years) preferred noncurrent music, the youngest age group (16 to 26) preferred current music and dance music [50].
TEAM (GROUP)
VERSUS INDIVIDUAL
PHYSICAL ACTIVITY
Researchers suggest that a task-orientation approach to physical activity and sport will promote higher levels of moral reasoning in children [51]. With this approach, outcome goals such as winning or scoring are replaced with individual self-referenced criteria and mastery of specific skills. Individual goal setting in sport and exercise has been shown to be a reliable motivational technique and may improve exercise and sport performance [51,52]. The use of cooperative team concepts such as buddy systems can enhance the safety and effectiveness of exercise programs. Teacher and health care professionals should focus the student’s attention toward achieving personal goals as opposed to team competitive goals.
INDIVIDUALIZING PHYSICAL ACTIVITY PROGRAMS King and colleagues suggest that exercise-promoting interventions be specifically tailored to the individual needs of each participant, especially as these needs relate to age, race, and gender [53]. For example, overweight children are physiologically and emotionally different from children of normal weight [29]. Therefore, successful intervention may depend on the use of specialized exercise programs designed to meet the overweight child’s specific needs [54]. If the student is cognitively ready to receive the information and physiologically capable of performing the physical task, then the instructor should experience success in motivating the obese child to participate in the physical activity, encouraging the child to maintain increased physical activity patterns, and promoting the student’s acquisition of educational concepts that support the physical activity [55]. In the last few years, researchers have unanimously adopted the multidisciplinary intervention model as a viable treatment for childhood obesity. The term multidisciplinary may be defined as that which includes more than two interactions from individuals, and treatment or interventions from different areas of study, expertise, or disciplines. The term is used loosely in medical research, referring to any treatment intervention in which professionals from different medical fields collaborate [56,57]. This model allows for the blending of behavioral techniques that promote increased self-efficacy recommendations individualized to the participant.
APPLICATION OF SOCIAL COGNITION THEORY IN MULTIDISCIPLINARY SETTINGS
TO
PROMOTE PHYSICAL ACTIVITY
Social cognition theory [34] provides training ideas that influence motivation to adopt any behavior (e.g., diet modification and physical activity) based on individual self-efficacy beliefs. Self-efficacy
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beliefs are learned from four separate sources: knowledge transfer, emotional or physiological responses when associated with behavioral performance, clear success or failure events or mastery experiences, and vicarious experiences through observational learning or through modeling and imitation [29]. Social cognitive theory recognizes a shared blend of these self-efficacy beliefs, which are interacting determinants of each other. An example of the use of these four separate sources of self efficacy is found in an intervention by Sothern and colleagues [55,58–60] as follows. Increasing Daily Energy Expenditures: The Moderate Intensity Progressive Exercise Program Step The initial class sets the stage for subsequent lessons in increasing daily energy expenditures. The Moderate Intensity Progressive Exercise Program (MPEP) step (Appendices A3.1, A3.3) is a fitness/behavior-modeling tool that provides immediate motivational instruction during the very first class. Students are instructed to stand erect, hold their shoulders back, and walk briskly around the room. Using Bandura’s concepts described earlier, this session provides an example of his theory that may be applied to the exercise setting. Mastery Experience and Role Modeling The participant becomes energized and feels taller, slimmer, and more in control through the action of lifting the chin, pulling the shoulders back, keeping the tummy tight, and taking quick, long steps. Additional motivation is derived from the fact that more calories will be burned, weight will be lost even before the diet is begun, and the participants will feel and look fitter, taller, and healthier. Knowledge Transfer Information on the value of increasing daily activity patterns is transferred through the illustration of the term work: work = force × distance; force = weight moved (simplified); distance = area covered in one step. When more space is covered in a step, more work is performed in the same amount of time, and thus more calories are burned. Sitting in a chair burns approximately 35–50 calories per hour, standing burns approximately 60–65 calories per hour, and just walking casually burns 150 to 300 calories per hour. For verbal cues please refer to Appendix A1. Physiologic Feedback Participants are instructed to observe their muscles as they contract, relax, and stretch. The patients are told that diets will quickly take off weight; however, unless the amount of activity each day is increased, the weight will be back in a very short time. Any time an individual moves a body part, one or more muscles contract or become shorter. The human body needs energy or “calories” to make the muscles do this. The body gets these calories either from the food that is eaten or from the stored fat in the body. The metabolic systems of the body and cardiopulmonary, aerobic exercise are listed in Table 14.1 and detailed in Chapter 20 and Appendices A3.1 and A3.3. Muscular Strength & Endurance: The MPEP Pump! (Chapter 20; Appendices A3.1, A3.3) Another objective within the MPEP program is the improvement of body movement awareness. The objective is based on the assumption that if an individual becomes competent at knowing which part of the body is responsible for a particular movement, he or she will then be able to identify safe and effective exercise. A balanced, symmetrical physique will promote long-term health in several ways. Injury will be deterred by the prevention of weak areas in the muscles. Balanced training will improve posture, resulting in a taller appearance. Through an improved perception of body size, the individual will experience increased self-esteem. He or she will be able to discriminate between movement that will enhance fitness and appearance, and that which may injure. This body
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TABLE 14.1 Illustrations of the Six Basic Areas of the Exercise Component and Examples in Each of the Four Concepts Physical Activity Lessons
Mastery
Knowledge
Role Models
Physiological Feedback
The MPEP step: increasing daily energy
Participant becomes energized, feels taller and thinner
Movement burns calories; definition of work
Individuals who walk briskly
Body parts moving as muscles contract. Brisk pace is energizing
Body locomotion: The engines of the body; metabolic systems: aerobic and anaerobic
The concept of the body as an engine is easily understood
Anaerobic and aerobic metabolism
Olympic power lifters; marathon runners, track and field stars, basketball stars
Rate of perceived exertion: student can identify vigorous or mild activity
Cardiorespiratory endurance: aerobic exercise
Low-impact aerobics are easy to perform
Many activities are aerobic; how to take a heart rate
Sport celebrities, mother and father, teacher
Students feel different muscles working, feel the heart rate pulse
The MPEP pump: muscular strength and endurance
Student’s muscles control movement; strength exercises are easy to execute
Trained muscles are stronger and burn calories.
Television and movie celebrities; the muscles of the body; negative: fat tissue model.
Feeling muscles shorten to move limb; visualizing muscles as tight, strong
Stretch and flex: muscular flexibility
Posture is enhanced — feeling of well-being
Balanced posture and body symmetry.
Negative: poor posture, lordosis, kyphosis
Observe personal body imbalance
Body composition
Students will feel successful after losing fat weight
Healthy ranges of fat in the body
Athletes and people who exercise frequently
Clothes feel loose; muscles feel tight
movement awareness will contribute to a feeling of control over the student’s near environment, enabling him or her to know precisely which muscles are responsible for certain movements. With this knowledge comes the power to gain self-control, self-discipline, and a healthy mind and body. Young children should be provided opportunities to safely climb, run, and jump to encourage the development of muscular strength and endurance [60]. The health benefits of strength training in children include the following: improved strength, increased power, improved muscular endurance, increased bone density and tendon–bone interface strength, improved motor performance, enhanced self-satisfaction, increased self-esteem, and positive body image. The prepubescent child in particular is at an increased risk of injury as a result of a reduction in joint flexibility caused by rapid growth in the long bones. The results of strength training provide additional resistance to sports injury in the prepubescent child and reduce the incidence of overuse injury. Moderate aerobic exercise combined with high-repetition resistance training and behavioral modification is most efficacious for reducing body composition variables in overweight children. A metaanalysis examined 30 childhood obesity treatment studies that included an exercise intervention. Significant decreases in body composition were associated with programs that combined low-intensity aerobic with high-repetition strength training [60,61]. Muscular strength and endurance are discussed as the instructor passes around plastic models of lean tissue and fat tissue for the students to observe and feel. The function of the muscle as a shortening unit to lift and lower body parts is illustrated (Chapter 20, Appendix A3.3).
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Mastery Mastery is achieved immediately as students realize the muscular control they possess, naturally, to move the individual body parts. Likewise, there is instantaneous physiological feedback as the students “feel” the muscles shorten and lengthen. The strength circuit exercises are easy to execute when performed with the recommended amount of weight or resistance. Students are amazed at how easily they can achieve the prescribed number of repetitions with the hand and leg weights. Knowledge Transfer and Physiological Feedback Knowledge of how the muscles function is transferred through the class discussion. The importance of practice or repeating the movement to “teach the muscles” to become stronger, more dense, and tighter achieves both knowledge transfer and physiological feedback. Role Modeling The plastic fat and lean tissue models serve as desired and undesired outcomes. Positive role models such as television and movie celebrities are used to motivate the students. The muscles themselves become role models, taking on an animated character of their own through the verbal cues described above. The remaining topics, muscular flexibility and body fat composition, are summarized in Table 14.1 and detailed in Chapter 20 and Appendices A3.1, A3.3. The lessons described above are examples from a specialized program called MPEP by Sothern et al. [55,58–60] that consists of a system of knowledge that organizes the educational content according to social cognitive theory [62]. It is designed to ensure that the recommended physical activities may be successfully performed by individuals with various overweight conditions. In addition, the educational content is organized in a developmentally appropriate manner that is easily comprehended by students of all ages. Therefore, the program is designed to better serve the emotional and cognitive, as well as physiologic, needs of obese individuals. By providing activities that illicit initial success, it is proposed that the program will improve mastery concepts, thereby increasing self-efficacy beliefs. Because knowledge of the positive outcome of the desired behavior change is central to the application of social learning theories (“learning” is even in the title), the specialized program is also designed according to established curriculum design principles, follows behavioral learning and cognitive/developmental theories, and is based on well-accepted instructional methodologies. The specialized exercise curriculum design provides content knowledge in health and fitness through participation in physical activities and instructional sessions. By using a specialized exercise curriculum design, the concepts of social cognitive theory are implemented. When designing exercise programs for obese children, the instructor should consider activities that are easily mastered. Such activities will ensure that students experience initial success when participating in physical activity if adherence to the program is desired [55,59]. Competitive programs with nonobese counterparts may not be appropriate because of the limited physiologic capacity of the obese child and the additional risk of injury resulting from excess weight on the premature musculoskeletal system [63–65]. The Moderate Intensity Progressive Exercise Program by Sothern et al. [55,58–60] provides guidelines for duration, frequency, and intensity of exercise for at risk for overweight, overweight, and severely overweight children (Figure 14.1, Figure 14.2, Figure 14.3). These guidelines are conservative and progressive, increasing gradually over time. This is to ensure safety and to promote the attainment of mastery in the overweight students. The MPEP program is specific to the different levels of overweight (i.e., initially the severely overweight students have shorter beginning durations and frequencies than do the overweight or at risk for overweight students) (Figure 14.1, Figure 14.2). In addition, because excess fat weight places an increased burden on an individual’s cardiorespiratory and musculoskeletal systems, the recommended exercise activities for the moderate and severely obese children are arm specific and less weight bearing. Students are allowed to choose the type of aerobic activity from an extensive list provided by the instructor. The guidelines are discussed in greater detail in Chapter 20.
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Minutes per Session
60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Week 1 At Risk
Week 5 Overweight
Week 10 Severely Overweight
FIGURE 14.1 Moderate intensity progressive exercise, prescribed duration of exercise. 6
Days per Week
5 4 3 2 1 0 Week 1
Week 5
Overweight
Obese
Week 10 Severe Obesity
FIGURE 14.2 Moderate intensity progressive exercise, prescribed frequency of exercise. 65 60
% V02 max
55 50 45 40 35 30 Week 1 Normal
Week 5 Overweight
Week 10 Obese
Severe
FIGURE 14.3 Moderate intensity progressive exercise, prescribed intensity of exercise.
A recent study examined changes in self-reported physical activity versus prescribed MPEP physical activity guidelines in children with increasing levels of BMI [66] (Figure 14.4, Figure 14.5, Figure 14.6, Figure 14.7). Eighteen overweight children were enrolled in the Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center pediatric weight management program. Measures of weight and
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Self-reported increases in physical activity in obese youth after a 10-week specialized exercise program 90 80 Godin Total Score
kg
70 60 50 40 30 Baseline
10 weeks
Godin leisure time
N = 18; p < 0.01
Weight
FIGURE 14.4 Reduction in body weight and increase in physical activity.
Minutes per week
Volume of exercise in severely obese children 2000 1800 1600 1400 1200 1000 800 600 400 200 0 Week 1
Week 5 Goal
Week 10
p < 0.0001
Actual
FIGURE 14.5 Self-reported (actual) vs. prescribed (goal) exercise in severely overweight (≥ 99th %BMI) youth.
height were obtained at both baseline and 10 weeks. The program, based on social cognitive theory [62], included the MPEP program and a low-calorie diet, supplemented with extra fluid, minerals, and vitamins. Subjects were given a Godin Leisure-Time Exercise Questionnaire [67]. After completion, each was scored accordingly: total number of 15-minute intervals of strenuous, moderate, and mild exercise completed for each week. The subjects met weekly to evaluate progress and also completed exercise report cards, listing individual daily activity volume (frequency × duration). From baseline to 10 weeks, weight and BMI significantly decreased (Figure 14.4). In addition, there was a significant increase in the Godin coded scores and self-reported exercise volume from baseline to 10 weeks (Figure 14.4). More important, when the prescribed volume of exercise was compared with that self-reported by the overweight children, significant differences were observed in at-risk, overweight, and especially severely overweight youth (Figure 14.5, Figure 14.6, Figure 14.7).
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Volume of exercise in overweight children 1600
Minutes per week
1400 1200 1000 800 600 400 200 0 Week 1
Week 5 Goal
Week 10 p < 0.0001 Actual
FIGURE 14.6 Self-reported (actual) vs. prescribed (goal) exercise in overweight (≥ 95% BMI) youth, Volume of exercise in at-risk for overweight children 1800
Minutes per week
1600 1400 1200 1000 800 600 400 200 0 Week 1
Week 5
Week 10 p < 0.0001
Goal
Actual
FIGURE 14.7 Self-reported (actual) vs. prescribed (goal) exercise in at-risk for overweight (≤ 85% BMI) youth.
Children consistently self-reported a significantly greater volume of exercise than what was prescribed. These results reinforce the concept that exercise programs for overweight youth should first seek to increase mastery concepts by establishing clear, attainable goals that gradually increase in volume over time. In these physically inactive youth, an incremental approach with increases of approximately 10% per week is recommended [68]. Progressing too quickly is counter-productive and leads to injury.
SUMMARY Changing health habits requires both motivation and self-regulatory skills. Individuals must learn to monitor their health behavior and use proximal goals to motivate themselves. Realistic, attainable goals are desired, and therefore, information concerning the initial health, abilities, fitness levels, and interests of the patients are essential. Social support from family and peers will help sustain
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Volume of exercise in all groups combined 1800 Minutes per week
1600 1400 1200 1000 800 600 400 200
ΔBMI: –3.2 kg/m2 ΔWT: –7.4 kg
0 Week 1
Week 5 Goal
Week 10
p < 0.0001
Actual
FIGURE 14.8 Self-reported (actual) vs. prescribed (goal) exercise in overweight youth.
their efforts as long as it provides the type of support that enhances their self-efficacy. The health care professional must provide ongoing supervision and guidance. Individuals with increasing levels of overweight conditions will respond differently to exercise of differing modalities and intensities. In specialized populations such as these, clinicians and educators are at a great disadvantage when attempting to prescribe appropriate activities and deliver educational interventions. By implementing specialized programs that address these issues, successful prevention and treatment of pediatric obesity may be possible. Clinical treatment intervention programs designed to promote behavior change should contain activities structured to the specific physical, emotional, and cognitive needs of the participants. Physical activities for overweight individuals should be appropriate to their specific physiologic needs. Educational activities should be based on well-established curriculum design principles to ensure successful motivation and a positive learning environment.
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12. Metcalf, J. A. and S. O. Roberts. Strength training and the immature athlete: an overview. Pediatr Nurs. 19:325–332, 1993. 13. McWhorter, J. W., H. W. Wallmann, and P. T. Alpert. The obese child: motivation as a tool for exercise. J Pediatr Health Care. 17:11–17, 2003. 14. McInnis, K. J., B. A. Franklin, and J. M. Rippe. Counseling for physical activity in overweight and obese patients. Am Fam Physician. 67:1249–1256, 2003. 15. Dishman, R. K. The measurement conundrum in exercise adherence research. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 26:1382–1390, 1994. 16. Sonstroem, R. J. Physical self-concept: assessment and external validity. Exerc Sport Sci Rev. 26:133–164, 1998. 17. Chalip, L., Csikszentmihalyi, M., Kleiber, D., Larson, R. Variations of experience in formal and informal sport. Res Q Exerc Sport. 35:109–116, 1984. 18. Stucky-Ropp, R. C. and T. M. DiLorenzo. Determinants of exercise in children. Prev Med. 22:880–889, 1993. 19. Epstein, L. H., K. R. Klein, and L. Wisniewski. Child and parent factors that influence psychological problems in obese children. Intl J Eat Disord. 15:151–158, 1994. 20. Epstein, L. H., A. Valoski, R. Koeske, and R. R. Wing. Family-based behavioral weight control in obese young children. J Am Diet Assoc. 86:481–484, 1986. 21. Epstein, L. H., A. Valoski, R. R. Wing, and J. McCurley. Ten-year follow-up of behavioral, familybased treatment for obese children. JAMA. 264:2519–2523, 1990. 22. Epstein, L. H., R. R. Wing, R. Koeske, and A. Valoski. Effect of parent weight on weight loss in obese children. J Consult Clin Psychol. 54:400–401, 1986. 23. Duncan, S. C., T. E. Duncan, and L. A. Strycker. Sources and types of social support in youth physical activity. Health Psychol. 24:3–10, 2005. 24. Taylor, W. C., S. N. Blair, S. S. Cummings, C. C. Wun, and R. M. Malina. Childhood and adolescent physical activity patterns and adult physical activity. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 31:118–123, 1999. 25. Jackson, S. A. Athletes in flow: a qualitative investigation of flow states in elite figure skaters. J Appl Sport Psychol. 4:161–180, 1992. 26. French, S. A., C. L. Perry, G. R. Leon, and J. A. Fulkerson. Food preferences, eating patterns, and physical activity among adolescents: correlates of eating disorders symptoms. J Adolesc Health. 15:286–294, 1994. 27. Borra, S. T., N. E. Schwartz, C. G. Spain, and M. M. Natchipolsky. Food, physical activity, and fun: inspiring America’s kids to more healthful lifestyles. J Am Diet Assoc. 95:816–823, 1995. 28. Moore, L. L., U. S. Nguyen, K. J. Rothman, L. A. Cupples, and R. C. Ellison. Preschool physical activity level and change in body fatness in young children. The Framingham Children’s Study. Am J Epidemiol. 142:982–988, 1995. 29. Hunter, S., Johnson, C.C., Little-Christian, S. et al. Heart Smart: a multifactorial approach to cardiovascular risk reduction for grade school students. Am J Health Promot. 4:352–360, 1990. 30. Braden, C. J. Learned self-help response to chronic illness experience: a test of three alternative learning theories. Sch Inq Nurs Pract. 4:23–41; discussion 43–25, 1990. 31. Garber, J. and S. D. Hollon. Universal versus personal helplessness in depression: belief in uncontrollability or incompetence? J Abnorm Psychol. 89:56–66, 1980. 32. Nolen-Hoeksema, S., J. S. Girgus, and M. E. Seligman. Learned helplessness in children: a longitudinal study of depression, achievement, and explanatory style. J Pers Soc Psychol. 51:435–442, 1986. 33. Fincham, F. D., A. Hokoda, and R. Sanders, Jr. Learned helplessness, test anxiety, and academic achievement: a longitudinal analysis. Child Dev. 60:138–145, 1989. 34. Bandura, A. Social Foundations on Thought and Action: A Social Cognition Theory. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1986. 35. Blair, J. E. Social learning theory: strategies for health promotion. J Amer Assoc Occup Hlth Nurses. 41:245–249, 1993. 36. Ajzen, I. The theory of planned behavior. Organiz Behav Hum Decision Processes. 50:179–211, 1991. 37. Crawley, F. E., Koballa, R.R. Attitude research in science education: contemporary models and methods. Sci Educ. 78:35–55, 1994. 38. Baranowski, T., K. W. Cullen, T. Nicklas, D. Thompson, and J. Baranowski. Are current health behavioral change models helpful in guiding prevention of weight gain efforts? Obes Res. 11 Suppl:23S–43S, 2003.
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39. Mummery, W. K., J. C. Spence, and J. C. Hudec. Understanding physical activity intention in Canadian school children and youth: an application of the theory of planned behavior. Res Q Exerc Sport. 71:116–124, 2000. 40. Trost, S. G., R. Saunders, and D. S. Ward. Determinants of physical activity in middle school children. Am J Health Behav. 26:95–102, 2002. 41. Bandura, A. Health promotion by social cognitive means. Health Educ Behav. 31:143–164, 2004. 42. Pollock, M. G. Gaesser, J. Butcher, J. Despres, R. Dishman, B. Franklin et al. American College of Sports Medicine Position Stand. The recommended quantity and quality of exercise for developing and maintaining cardiorespiratory and muscular fitness, and flexibility in healthy adults. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 30:975–991, 1998. 43. American College of Sports Medicine. ACSM’s Guidelines for Testing and Prescription, 6th ed. Baltimore, MD: Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins, 2000. 44. Barriers to guideline adherence. Based on a presentation by Michael Cabana, MD. Am J Manag Care. 4:S741–S744; discussion S745–S748, 1998. 45. Kushner, R. F. and R. L. Weinsier. Evaluation of the obese patient. Practical considerations. Med Clin North Am. 84:387–399, 2000. 46. Albright, C. L., S. Cohen, L. Gibbons, S. Miller, B. Marcus, J. Sallis, K. Imai, J. Jernick, and D. G. Simons-Morton. Incorporating physical activity advice into primary care: physician-delivered advice within the activity counseling trial. Am J Prev Med. 18:225–234, 2000. 47. Gordon, P. M., G. W. Heath, A. Holmes, and D. Christy. The quantity and quality of physical activity among those trying to lose weight. Am J Prev Med. 18:83–86, 2000. 48. Jakicic, J. M., R. R. Wing, B. A. Butler, and R. J. Robertson. Prescribing exercise in multiple short bouts versus one continuous bout: effects on adherence, cardiorespiratory fitness, and weight loss in overweight women. Int J Obes Relat Metabol Disord. 19:893–901, 1995. 49. Bailey, R. C., J. Olson, S. L. Pepper, J. Porszasz, T. J. Barstow, and D. M. Cooper. The level and tempo of children’s physical activities: an observational study. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 27:1033–1041, 1995. 50. Priest, D. L., C. I. Karageorghis, and N. C. Sharp. The characteristics and effects of motivational music in exercise settings: the possible influence of gender, age, frequency of attendance, and time of attendance. J Sports Med Phys Fitness. 44:77–86, 2004. 51. Kylo, B. and D. Landers. Goal setting in sport and exercise: a research synthesis to resolve the controversy. J Sport Exercise Psychol. 17:117–137, 1995. 52. Lerner, B. and E. Locke. The effects of goal setting, self-efficacy, competition, and personal traits on the performance of an endurance task. J Sport Exercise Psychol. 17:138–152, 1995. 53. King, A. C., C. B. Taylor, W. L. Haskell, and R. F. DeBusk. Influence of regular aerobic exercise on psychological health: a randomized, controlled trial of healthy middle-aged adults. Health Psychol. 8:305–324, 1989. 54. Neiman, D. Fitness and Sports Medicine: An Introduction. Palo Alto, CA: Bull Publishing Co., 1990 55. Sothern, M. S., S. Hunter, R. M. Suskind, R. Brown, J. N. Udall Jr., and U. Blecker. Motivating the obese child to move: the role of structured exercise in pediatric weight management. South Med J. 92:577–584, 1999. 56. Figueroa-Colon, R., T. K. von Almen, F. A. Franklin, C. Schuftan, and R. M. Suskind. Comparison of two hypocaloric diets in obese children. Am J Dis Child. 147:160–166, 1993. 57. Tuiten, A., A. Jansen, and H. P. Koppeschaar. Anorexia, bulimia, and exercise-induced amenorrhea: multidisciplinary approach. Curr Ther Endocrinol Metabol. 5:12–15, 1994. 58. Sothern, M. S., H. Schumacher, T. K. von Almen, L. K. Carlisle, and J. N. Udall. Committed to kids: an integrated, 4-level team approach to weight management in adolescents. J Am Diet Assoc. 102:S81–S85, 2002. 59. Sothern, M. S. Exercise as a modality in the treatment of childhood obesity. Pediatr Clin North Am. 48:995–1015, 2001. 60. Sothern, M., T. K. von Almen, and H. Schumach. Trim-Kids: The Proven Plan That Has Helped Thousands of Children Achieve a Healthier Weight. New York: Harper Collins, 2001. 61. LeMura, L. M. and M. T. Maziekas. Factors that alter body fat, body mass, and fat-free mass in pediatric obesity. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 34:487–496, 2002. 62. Bandura, A., D. Cioffi, C. B. Taylor, and M. E. Brouillard. Perceived self-efficacy in coping with cognitive stressors and opioid activation. J Pers Soc Psychol. 55:479–488, 1988.
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63. Van Itallie, T. Health implications of overweight and obesity in the United States. Ann Intern Med. 103:983–988, 1992. 64. Felson, D. T., Y. Zhang, J. M. Anthony, A. Naimark, and J. J. Anderson. Weight loss reduces the risk for symptomatic knee osteoarthritis in women. The Framingham Study. Ann Intern Med. 116:535–539, 1992. 65. Davis, M. A., W. H. Ettinger, and J. M. Neuhaus. Obesity and osteoarthritis of the knee: evidence from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES I). Semin Arthritis Rheum. 20:34–41, 1990. 66. Reed, J., C. Van Vrancken, M. Loftin, C. Singley, J. Udall and M. Sothern. Self reported increases in physical activity in obese youth after a 10-week specialized moderate intensity exercise program. Obes Res. 9(3), 159S, 2001. 67. Godin, G. and R. J. Shephard. Gender differences in perceived physical self-efficacy among older individuals. Percept Mot Skills. 60:599–602, 1985. 68. Strong, W., R. Malina, C. Blimkie, S. Daniels et al. Evidence-based physical activity for school-aged youth. J Pediatr. 146:732–737, 2005.
and Physical Activity: 15 Exercise Exercise Training Programs and Metabolic Health Scott Owens CONTENTS Introduction ....................................................................................................................................189 Components of Metabolic Health in the Pediatric Obesity/Exercise Literature ..........................190 Effects of Exercise on Components of Metabolic Health ............................................................190 Exercise and Dyslipidemia...................................................................................................190 Exercise and Triglycerides .......................................................................................190 Exercise and HDL Cholesterol ................................................................................194 Exercise and Hyperglycemia/Hyperinsulinemia ..................................................................194 Exercise and Glucose ...............................................................................................194 Exercise and Insulin .................................................................................................195 Exercise and Hypertension...................................................................................................195 Exercise and Abdominal Obesity.........................................................................................196 Exercise and Waist Circumference ..........................................................................196 Exercise and Visceral Adipose Tissue......................................................................196 Summary of Components of Successful Exercise Programs........................................................196 Mode of Exercise .................................................................................................................196 Intensity of Exercise.............................................................................................................196 Duration of Exercise.............................................................................................................197 Frequency of Exercise ..........................................................................................................197 Length of Exercise Training Program..................................................................................197 References ......................................................................................................................................197
INTRODUCTION Pediatric obesity is often associated with a poor metabolic profile. Data from the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey indicate that although the prevalence of metabolic syndrome in 12 to 19 year olds of normal body weight (body mass index [BMI] < 85th percentile) was relatively low (<1%), nearly 30% of overweight adolescents (BMI ≥ 95th percentile) met criteria for metabolic syndrome [1]. Accordingly, health care professionals involved in pediatric obesity management are interested in monitoring not only changes in the obesity status of their clients but also to changes in their patients’ metabolic status as well. Interventions that positively affect the metabolic profile of obese youths are therefore of considerable interest. This chapter examines the effects of exercise interventions on metabolic health in pediatric obesity. A brief discussion of the components of metabolic health usually targeted in exercise programs is presented first. Next, the effects of exercise on the individual components of metabolic 189
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health are presented. That discussion is followed by summary observations regarding the components of successful exercise interventions relative to mode, intensity, duration, frequency of exercise, and length of intervention.
COMPONENTS OF METABOLIC HEALTH IN THE PEDIATRIC OBESITY/EXERCISE LITERATURE Research on the effects of exercise on metabolic health in pediatric obesity has tended to focus on components of the metabolic syndrome as described in adults — that is, dyslipidemia, hyperglycemia, hypertension, and abdominal obesity. Although a uniform definition of the metabolic syndrome has yet to be established for the pediatric population [2], recent reviews on the topic have recommended measurements in youths that mirror those used with adults and include triglycerides and high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol (HDL-C) to characterize dyslipidemia, fasting glucose (or a glucose tolerance test) to characterize hyperglycemia, resting systolic and diastolic blood pressure to characterize hypertension, and waist circumference to characterize abdominal obesity [1,2]. This chapter focuses primarily on these components of metabolic health, with the effects of exercise on fasting insulin (a risk factor for the development of type II diabetes) and on visceral adipose tissue (a more precise measure of abdominal obesity risk) also being presented.
EFFECTS OF EXERCISE ON COMPONENTS OF METABOLIC HEALTH There have been relatively few training studies reporting on the effects of exercise on the metabolic health of obese youths. Table 15.1 summarizes the studies most pertinent to this discussion. These studies involved obese children or adolescents; included an exercise intervention lasting at least 6 weeks; provided details relative to exercise mode, frequency, intensity, and duration; and reported on changes in at least one of the components of the metabolic syndrome, as described above. Only five of the studies examined the effects of exercise alone on components of metabolic health [3–7]. More frequently, the interventions included some combination of exercise, caloric restriction, and behavior modification. These multicomponent interventions, although considered the preferred approach to pediatric obesity management [8,9], tended to make more difficult the task of determining the effects of exercise per se on changes in metabolic parameters. Nevertheless, examination of the available data supports the notion that exercise interventions can have beneficial effects on the metabolic health of obese children and adolescents.
EXERCISE
AND
DYSLIPIDEMIA
Exercise and Triglycerides Reduced triglycerides in obese youths following exercise training have been reported by several research groups. In studies conducted at the Medical College of Georgia, subjects attending afterschool exercise programs for either 4 months (7- to 11-year-old boys and girls) or 8 months (13- to 16-year-old boys and girls) had significantly lower fasting triglyceride concentrations following training, as compared with nonexercising control group subjects [10,11]. In both studies, the supervised exercise programs were offered 5 days per week at the Medical College’s indoor gym and included free transportation to the facility for the subjects. The exercise program for the obese (mean percentage body fat = 44.3 ± 9.4 via dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry [DEXA]) 7- to 11-year-old boys and girls consisted of 40 minutes of aerobic activities (20 minutes on exercise machines such as treadmills, cycle ergometers, and rowers and 20 minutes of continuous-movement games) [10]. The 73 subjects who completed the 4-month program (out of the original 79) averaged 4 days of attendance per week and exercised at an average heart rate of 157 beats per minute (subjects wore heart rate monitors each day). Estimated energy expenditure per exercise session was 233 kcal. No dietary intervention was involved. Fasting triglyceride concentrations were 21%
—
41 M/F
—
—
116 F 41 M/F
—
Wabitsch et al. [20] Woo et al. [15]
—
—
—
—
—
26 M/F —
12 F
—
—
Treuth et al. [7]
25 M/F —
—
—
50 M/F
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Sothern et al. [13]
—
—
40 M/F 13 F 7 M 41c M/F 27 M/F —
11 M/F —
—
11 M/F —
—
—
Diet Only
41 M/F
Becque et al. [19] Ferguson et al. [10] Gutin et al. [3] Kahle et al. [4] Kang et al. [11] Owens et al. [5] Rocchini et al. [21] Sasaki et al. [6]
Study
Ex + Diet
Ex Only
Ex + Diet + Beh
Subjects/Groups
44% BF
13
10
—
9
38% BF
31.3 BMI
39% BF
12
15
>20% excess weight 183% IBW
11
44% BF
44% BF
39% BF
43% BF
44% BF
40% BF
Obesity Status
9
15
13
9
9
13
—
11 F
—
18d M/F 32 M/F 22 M/F 48n M/F
14 M/F 39a M/F 12 Fb —
Con
Mean Age
Circuit strength training Various aerobic Aerobic + strength
Aerobic + strength
Various aerobic Various aerobic Various aerobic Various aerobic Various aerobic Various aerobic Various aerobic Running
Mode
TABLE 15.1 Studies Examining Exercise and Metabolic Health in Pediatric Obesity
3
40 60–70% max HR
3
20
7
—
—
60–120
7
20
3
40
—
45–55% VO2 max 12–15 Reps
70–85% max HR 70% VO2 max
5
5
3
45
60–70% max HR 138 bpme 154 bpmf 157 bpm 43g 29h 40
5
5
3
30
40
50
Freq d/wk
163 bpm
60–80% max HR 157 bpm
Int
Dur Min
Exercise Program
6
6
20
10
104
20
16
32
15
10
16
20
Length Wks
NS
8%
NS
NS
NS
NS
NS
+16%p +19%q
↓o
32%
—
—
NS
NS
NS
NS
+22%
HDL
—
—
NS
NS
21%
NS
TG
—
—
—
—
NS
15%
NS
NS
—
Glu
—
↓
—
—
↓
—
—
↓m
↓l
—
—
↓i
NS
—
—
↓
DBP
—
NS
↓
—
—
↓
SBP
—
8.1 cm
NS
—
—
VATk
VATj
—
—
—
—
WC
Change in Metabolic Syndrome Component
Exercise and Physical Activity: Exercise Training Programs and Metabolic Health 191
b
Nonexercise group during months 1–4, exercise group during months 5–8. Received lifestyle education program. c Number of subjects assigned to either the moderate- or high-intensity exercise group and provided with postintervention data. Subjects also received lifestyle education. d Number of subjects assigned to the lifestyle education group and who were provided postintervention data. e Moderate-intensity exercise group. f High-intensity exercise group. g Moderate-intensity exercise group. h High-intensity exercise group. i High-intensity exercise group significantly lower than lifestyle-only group. j Visceral adipose tissue significantly lower in the exercise groups compared with the lifestyle-only group. k Significantly lower increase in VAT; the exercise group compared with the nonexercise group. l Significantly lower in the exercise group than in diet or control group. m Significantly lower in the exercise group than in the control group. n Nonobese controls. o Significant decrease in girls only. p In boys. q In girls. Note: Ex = Exercise; Beh = Behavioral; Con = Control group; Int = Intensity of exercise; Dur = Duration of exercise sessions; Freq = Frequency of exercise sessions; TG = Triglycerides; HDL = High-density lipoprotein cholesterol; Glu = Glucose; SBP = Systolic blood pressure; DBP = Diastolic blood pressure; WC = Waist circumference; M = Male; F = Female; BF = Body fat; HR = Heart Rate; Reps = repetitions; NS = not statistically significant; ↓ = significant decrease; bpm = Beats per minute; VAT = Visceral adipose tissue; IBW = Ideal body weight; BMI = Body mass index; dash (—) = variable not reported.
a
TABLE 15.2 (continued) Studies Examining Exercise and Metabolic Health in Pediatric Obesity
192 Handbook of Pediatric Obesity: Clinical Management
Exercise and Physical Activity: Exercise Training Programs and Metabolic Health
193
lower following 4 months of exercise training as compared with after 4 months of nontraining. Significant reductions in percentage body fat also occurred following training. In the obese (mean percentage body fat = 44.5 ± 12.8 via DEXA) 13- to 16-year-old boys and girls, the after-school exercise program lasted 8 months [11]. The 80 adolescents were randomly assigned to one of three groups: moderate-intensity exercise plus lifestyle education, high-intensity exercise plus lifestyle education, or lifestyle education only. The exercise program again consisted of a combination of aerobic exercise on machines and continuous-movement activities. Across the 8 months, attendance at the exercise sessions averaged 2 to 3 days per week in the two exercise groups. The moderate-intensity exercise group averaged 43 minutes of exercise per session at an average heart rate of 138 beats per minute. The high-intensity group exercised for an average of 29 minutes per session at 154 beats per minute. The estimated exercise energy expenditures for the two groups were similar, averaging 250 kcal/session for the moderate-intensity group and 236 kcal/session for the high-intensity group. Pre- to posttraining change scores indicated a significant reduction in triglyceride concentrations in the high-intensity exercise group (0.22 ± 0.08 mmol·L–1) as compared with the lifestyle education-only group (0.13 ± 0.08 mmol·L–1). Triglycerides also declined in the moderate-intensity exercise group (0.04 ± 0.08 mmol·L–1), but the comparison with the lifestyle-only group was not statistically significant. The changes in percentage body fat among the three groups were not significantly different. The authors also conducted an analysis in which the high- and moderate-intensity exercise groups were combined into a single exercise group and then compared with the nonexercise lifestyle group [11]. This analysis indicated a significant interaction between the baseline triglyceride value and group assignment, indicating that exercise was especially effective in reducing triglyceride values in subjects with high baseline values. This finding is encouraging because obese children and adolescents tend to display elevated triglyceride values [12]. The analysis also indicates the exercise group reduced percentage body fat to a significantly greater extent than the nonexercise lifestyle group (3.57 ± 0.80 vs. 0.19 ± 0.62) [11]. In another exercise-only intervention, Japanese researchers reported that a 2-year program of in-school aerobic exercise significantly reduced triglyceride levels in obese (>120% of ideal body weight) 11- to 13-year-old girls, but not in obese boys [6]. The exercise program consisted primarily of running for 20 minutes at 70% of VO2 max four mornings and three afternoons per week for 2 years. Compliance with the exercise program was nearly 100%. Triglyceride levels declined 27% in girls and 13% in boys, but only the difference in girls was statistically significant. The reason for the gender difference in triglyceride response was unclear. Significant decreases in body fat were observed in both sexes. Researchers at the Louisiana State University School of Medicine and the Children’s Hospital of New Orleans reported significant reductions in triglycerides in a group of 50 obese (BMI = 35.4 ± 6.98) boys and girls (mean age = 12.3 ± 2.7 years) following 10 weeks of diet and exercise intervention [13]. The diet involved a protein-sparing modified fast supplying approximately 800 kcal per day. A home-based exercise program was used (including an instructional video) that was individualized according to the degree of obesity. The program included moderate intensity (45 to 55% VO2 max) aerobic activities as well as strength and flexibility exercises [14]. The duration and frequency of exercise were gradually increased through the 10 weeks of the program. In addition, subjects engaged in supervised exercise classes of 30 to 40 minutes during weekly group meetings. After 10 weeks of intervention, BMI declined an average of 12.7% from 35.4 ± 7.0 to 30.9 ± 6.5, and triglyceride values declined 32% from 96.3 mg·dL–1 to 65.7 mg·dL–1. Although the individual contributions of the diet and exercise components of the intervention were not parceled out, the authors have suggested that the reduced triglycerides were probably a result of the combined effects of diet and exercise [14]. Not all exercise interventions have been associated with significant reductions in triglyceride levels. Kahle et al. reported that a 15-week school-based exercise program that included participation in various aerobic activities 3 days per week, 45 minutes per session, at 60 to 70% of maximum heart rate, failed
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to result in a significant change in triglyceride values in a group of seven obese (mean percentage body fat = 38.8 ± 5.5 via hydrostatic weighing) boys 11 to 14 years of age [4]. Woo et al. examined changes in triglycerides in 82 obese (mean percentage body fat = 37.6 ± 3.7 via DEXA) boys and girls 10 years of age who were randomly assigned to interventions that involved either diet alone (900 to 1200 kcal per day) or diet plus exercise [15]. The exercise program consisted of 30 minutes of resistance and 10 minutes of aerobic exercises 2 days per week in a hospital setting. No significant changes in triglyceride concentrations were observed in either group after 6 weeks of training. Despite the negative findings in some studies, the majority of the pediatric obesity studies have reported favorable changes in triglycerides following interventions involving exercise (Table 15.1). Exercise and HDL Cholesterol Although increased HDL-C following exercise training has been observed in several obese adult populations [16–18], reports involving obese youths have been somewhat inconsistent. In a University of Michigan study, changes in HDL-C were examined in 36 obese (mean percentage body fat = 40.3 via hydrostatic weighing) adolescents following a 20-week intervention that involved random assignment to one of three groups: diet plus behavior change, diet plus behavior change plus exercise, or control [19]. The exercise component consisted of three 40-minute aerobic activity sessions (walking, jogging, swimming, dance, soccer, and continuous-play activities) per week with heart rates maintained between 60% and 80% of age-predicted maximum. Increases in HDL-C following the intervention were significantly greater in the group engaged in aerobic training (+23%) as compared with either the diet plus behavior change group (+11%) or the control group (+8%). The observation that the greater increase in HDL-C for the exercise group occurred despite a somewhat greater reduction in percentage body fat in the diet plus behavior change group (44.0 to 40.5% vs. 38.3 to 35.3%) prompted the authors to suggest that an exercise training effect, independent of change in body fat, was primarily responsible for the improvement in HDL-C. In the study of obese Japanese children mentioned above [6], 2 years of daily 20-minute jogging without dietary intervention was associated with significant increases in HDL-C in boys (62.6 to 69.2 mg·dL–1) and in girls (57.5 to 65.3 mg·dL–1). Kahle et al. reported that HDL-C increased from 0.89 ± 0.12 to 1.04 ± 0.29 mmol·L–1 following 15 weeks of aerobic training in seven obese boys, although the increase was not statistically significant [4]. The Medical College of Georgia studies with obese children and adolescents have failed to observe significant increases in HDL-C following exercise training programs [3,10,11], although in their study of 13- to 16-year-old boys and girls, a significant improvement in the total cholesterol/HDL-C ratio was observed in the subjects engaged in 8 months of after-school exercise as compared with nonexercising controls [11]. The Louisiana State University group also found only nonsignificant increases in HDL-C (41.3 to 42.0 mg·dL–1) following 10 weeks of exercise and dietary intervention in 50 obese boys and girls [13]. Likewise, a 6-week program of dietary intervention (~1000 kcal/day) and 1 to 2 hours of daily controlled exercise (swimming, jogging, ball games) resulted in a less than 2% increase in HDL-C in a group of 116 obese (>120% ideal body weight) adolescent girls [20]. The 6-week exercise intervention by Woo et al. also failed to produce changes in HDL-C [15]. Thus, it appears the HDL-C responses to exercise programs in pediatric obesity are less predictable than those in obese adults. The short duration of some of the pediatric studies (6 to 10 weeks) may partially explain the negative findings. Whether future research with obese children and adolescents will be able to identify the optimal exercise dose for positively influencing this particular risk factor remains to be seen.
EXERCISE
AND
HYPERGLYCEMIA/HYPERINSULINEMIA
Exercise and Glucose Only a few studies have reported on the effects of exercise training on fasting glucose concentrations in pediatric obesity, with mixed results. In their 15-week aerobic training study, Kahle et al. reported
Exercise and Physical Activity: Exercise Training Programs and Metabolic Health
195
that fasting serum glucose decreased from 5.24 ± 0.25 to 4.45 ± 0.44 mmol·L–1 in obese 11- to 14-year-old boys [4]. Woo et al. reported that glucose decreased significantly in obese children after 6 weeks of diet plus exercise training, whereas decreases in glucose were not statistically significant in the diet-only group [15]. Others have failed to observe decreases in fasting glucose. Treuth et al. examined the effects of a 5-month resistance training program on fasting glucose in 11 obese (mean percentage body fat = 38.9 ± 6.6 via DEXA) 7- to 10-year-old girls [7]. The resistance training program took place at an elementary school and consisted of 20-minute sessions, three times per week, for 5 months, with subjects completing six upper-body exercises and one lower-body exercise using a circuit training approach. Fasting glucose values were similar before and after training (5.0 ± 0.03 vs. 4.8 ± 0.18 pmol·L–1). Likewise, the Medical College of Georgia group failed to observe significant changes in fasting glucose concentrations after 4 months of after school exercise in obese 7- to 11-year-old subjects or following 8 months of after-school exercise in subjects aged 13 to 16 years [10,11]. Exercise and Insulin The picture appears somewhat different relative to insulin. Although 5 months of resistance training failed to alter fasting insulin levels significantly in 7- to 10-year-old obese girls [7], the Georgia group found that 4 months of after-school aerobic exercise reduced fasting insulin significantly (~15%) in obese 7- to 11-year-old boys and girls [10]. In another exercise-only study, Kahle et al. reported that after 15 weeks of aerobic exercise, peak insulin response and total insulin area following a test meal were significantly lower than before training and were independent of changes in body weight or body fat [4]. Also, 6 weeks of dietary intervention (~1000 kcal/day) and 1 to 2 hours of daily swimming, jogging, and ball games resulted in a 21% decrease in fasting insulin levels in a group of 116 obese adolescent girls [20]. Thus, some experimental data support the efficacy of exercise for reducing fasting insulin levels in obese youths. Additional research on this component of metabolic health is clearly needed.
EXERCISE
AND
HYPERTENSION
There are several reports of significantly reduced resting blood pressure following exercise programs in obese youths. Rocchini et al. randomly assigned 72 obese (mean percentage body fat = 44 ± 7 via hydrostatic weighing) adolescents to one of three treatment groups: diet plus behavior change, diet plus behavior change plus exercise, and no intervention control [21]. The diet was designed to produce a weight loss of approximately 1 to 2 lb per week. The exercise program included 40 minutes of aerobic activities (walking, jogging, swimming, dancing, and other recreational activities) at 70 to 75% of maximum heart rate 3 days per week for 20 weeks. After 20 weeks, both intervention groups experienced significantly greater decreases in resting systolic and diastolic blood pressure as compared with the control group. Because both intervention groups also lost significant amounts of body weight, the authors performed a secondary analysis in which change in body weight was included as a covariate. This analysis revealed that the group that combined caloric restriction and exercise experienced the greatest decrease in resting systolic blood pressure. The study by Wabitsch et al. that included a 6-week program of dietary intervention (~1000 kcal/day) and 1 to 2 hours of daily controlled exercise (swimming, jogging, ball games) resulted in significant declines in systolic (125 ± 11 mm Hg to 116 ± 10 mm Hg) and diastolic (65 ± 9 mm Hg to 60 ± mm Hg) blood pressure in a group of 116 obese (>120% ideal body weight) adolescent girls [20]. The Medical College of Georgia group reported that obese 13- to 16-yearold subjects who engaged in 8 months of lifestyle education and after-school exercise experienced a significantly greater reduction in resting diastolic blood pressure than the group that participated in lifestyle education only [11]. Changes in resting systolic blood pressure were also greater in the exercise group as compared with the lifestyle-only group (6 ± 3 mm Hg vs. + 2 ± 3 mm Hg), but the differences did not achieve statistical significance. Kahle et al. observed a significant reduction
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Handbook of Pediatric Obesity: Clinical Management
in systolic, but not diastolic, blood pressure following 15 weeks of aerobic training in obese 11to 14-year-old boys [4].
EXERCISE
AND
ABDOMINAL OBESITY
Exercise and Waist Circumference Data are limited on the effects of exercise on waist circumference in pediatric obesity. Wabitsch et al. observed a mean reduction of 8.1 cm in waist circumference in a group of 116 obese adolescent girls following 6 weeks of dietary intervention (~1000 kcal/day) and 1 to 2 hours of daily controlled aerobic exercise [20]. Exercise and Visceral Adipose Tissue Two research groups have reported on the favorable effects of exercise, without dietary intervention, on visceral adipose tissue in obese youths. The Medical College of Georgia group observed an attenuation in the rate at which visceral adipose tissue accumulated in 7- to 11-year-old subjects who participated in 4 months of after-school exercise, as compared with the nonexercising control subjects. That is, the accumulation of visceral adipose tissue was significantly less after 4 months in the exercise group as compared with the nonexercise group (1.3 cm3 vs. 20.9 cm3) [5]. In their study of obese adolescents, the Georgia group reported that those who attended after-school exercise classes at least 2 days per week for 8 months showed a significantly greater reduction in visceral adipose tissue than did those attending lifestyle-education-only classes (42.0 ± 9.3 cm3 vs. 11.0 ± 10.0 cm3) [22]. Treuth et al. reported that a resistance training program (20-minute sessions, three times per week for 5 months) attenuated the expected increase in visceral adipose tissue in 11 obese 7- to 10-year-old girls [7]. The authors noted that although the exercise did not reduce visceral adipose tissue, prevention of an increase can be considered a favorable outcome because an increase in this adipose tissue depot is of primary health importance as a result of its association with cardiovascular risk in children.
SUMMARY OF COMPONENTS OF SUCCESSFUL EXERCISE PROGRAMS MODE
OF
EXERCISE
A variety of modes of aerobic exercise have been employed to improve the metabolic health of obese children and adolescents, including walking, jogging, swimming, rope skipping, aerobic dance, and various continuous-movement games [4,5,11,13,19]. Stationary exercise machines such as treadmills, cycle ergometers, and rowers have been employed successfully with children as young as 7 years of age, although it appears that also including play-oriented aerobic activities with younger age groups is advisable [23]. Providing a choice of aerobic activities appears to relate to the “likeability” young people have for various modes of exercise [24]. The data also indicate that successful alteration of metabolic health components through exercise is not limited to aerobic type activities. Sothern et al. [13] and Woo et al. [15] employed strength training as part of their exercise programs, and Treuth et al. reported that resistance training three times per week for 5 months appeared to attenuate the expected increase in visceral fat in 7to 10-year-old girls [7].
INTENSITY
OF
EXERCISE
Exercise intensities for the aerobic component of successful interventions have tended to fall within the “moderate to vigorous” category; that is, 60 to 80% of maximum age-related heart rate [4,10,15,19,21]. This intensity is in keeping with the recent Scientific Statement of the American Heart Association’s Committee on Atherosclerosis, Hypertension, and Obesity in the Young that
Exercise and Physical Activity: Exercise Training Programs and Metabolic Health
197
recommended at least 30 minutes of moderate to vigorous physical activity on most, and preferably all, days of the week [25]. The effect of exercise intensity on metabolic health outcomes was directly tested by the research group at the Medical College of Georgia. After 8 months of after-school exercise in 13- to 16-yearold obese subjects randomly assigned to either the moderate-intensity exercise group (average heart rate of 138 beats per minute, 69% of age-predicted maximum) or the high-intensity exercise group (154 beats per min, 77% of age-predicted maximum), the researchers found little evidence that high-intensity training was more effective than moderate-intensity training in enhancing the metabolic health of obese adolescents [11].
DURATION
OF
EXERCISE
Durations of individual training sessions in successful exercise interventions have varied widely, ranging from as little as 20 minutes per session [6] to as long as 2 hours [20]. Most of the studies, however, reported durations falling within the 30- to 50-minute range [4,5,13,19,21,22], which would meet the American Heart Association’s recommendation that obese youths engage in at least 30 minutes of moderate to vigorous physical activity daily [25].
FREQUENCY
OF
EXERCISE
Two successful interventions included exercise 7 days per week [6,20], although one of these studies occurred in association with a 6-week weight-loss camp [20]. After-school exercise programs were offered 5 days per week in the Medical College of Georgia studies, with attendance averaging 4 days per week across 4 months in the 7- to 11-year-old children and 2 to 3 days per week over 8 months in the 13- to 16-year-old subjects [5,22]. Greater exercise frequency was associated with less increase in body mass in the 7- to 11-year-old children [26], whereas in the 13- to 16-yearold subjects, the combination of increased attendance, exercise heart rate, and energy expenditure was associated with greater reductions in percentage body fat [22]. Exercise frequencies of 3 days per week were associated with improved metabolic profiles in several studies [4,7,19,21].
LENGTH
OF
EXERCISE TRAINING PROGRAM
It is not clear from the limited number of studies in this area whether there exists a minimum length of exercise training for improving metabolic health in pediatric obesity. As discussed here, improvements in the metabolic health of obese youths were reported for training studies as short as 6 weeks [20] and as long as 2 years [6]. Practical considerations associated with clinical obesity management in terms of staffing, availability of exercise space and equipment, and the nature of parental involvement will likely play a major role in determining the length of a structured exercise component of an obesity management program.
REFERENCES 1. Cook S, Weitzman M, Auinger P, Nguyen M, Dietz WH. Prevalence of a metabolic syndrome phenotype in adolescents: findings from the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 1988-1994. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2003;157:821–827. 2. Cruz ML, Goran MI. The metabolic syndrome in children and adolescents. Curr Diab Rep. 2004;4:53–62. 3. Gutin B, Cucuzzo N, Islam S, Smith C, Stachura ME. Physical training, lifestyle education, and coronary risk factors in obese girls. Med Sci Sports Exer. 1996;28:19–23. 4. Kahle EB, Zipf WB, Lamb DR, Horswill CA, Ward KM. Association between mild, routine exercise and improved insulin dynamics and glucose control in obese adolescents. Inter J Sports Med. 1996;17:1–6. 5. Owens S, Gutin B, Allison J, Riggs S, Ferguson M, Litaker M, Thompson W. Effect of physical training on total and visceral fat in obese children. Med Sci Sports Exer. 1999;31:143–148.
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6. Sasaki J, Shindo M, Tanaka H, Ando M, Arakawa K. A long-term aerobic exercise program decreases the obesity index and increases the high density lipoprotein cholesterol concentration in obese children. Inter J Obesity. 1987;11:339–345. 7. Treuth MS, Hunter GR, Figueroa-Colon R, Goran MI. Effects of strength training on intra-abdominal adipose tissue in obese prepubertal girls. Med Sci Sports Exer. 1998;30:1738–1743. 8. Epstein LH, Myers MD, Raynor HA, Saelens BE. Treatment of pediatric obesity. Pediatrics. 1998;101:554–570. 9. Suskind R, Blecker U, Udall J, Jr., Von Almen T, Schumacher H, Carlisle L, Sothern M. Recent advances in the treatment of childhood obesity. Pediatr Diab. 2000;1:23–33. 10. Ferguson MA, Gutin B, Le NA, Karp W, Litaker M, Humphries M et al. Effects of exercise training and its cessation on components of the insulin resistance syndrome in obese children. Inter J Obes Rel Metab Disor. 1999;22:889–895. 11. Kang HS, Gutin B, Barbeau P, Owens S, Lemmon CR, Allison J, Litaker MS, Le NA. Physical training improves insulin resistance syndrome markers in obese adolescents. Med Sci Sports Exer. 2002;34:1920–1927. 12. Smoak CG, Burke GL, Webber LS, Harsha DW, Srinivasan SR, Berenson GS. Relation of obesity to clustering of cardiovascular disease risk factors in children and young adults. The Bogalusa Heart Study. Am J Epidemiol. 1987;125:364–372. 13. Sothern MS, Despinasse B, Brown R, Suskind RM, Udall JN, Jr., Blecker U. Lipid profiles of obese children and adolescents before and after significant weight loss: differences according to sex. South Med J. 2000;93:278–282. 14. Suskind RM, Sothern MS, Farris RP, von Almen TK, Schumacher H, Carlisle L et al. Recent advances in the treatment of childhood obesity. Ann NY Acad Sci. 1993;699:181–199. 15. Woo KS, Chook P, Yu CW, Sung RY, Qiao M, Leung SS et al. Effects of diet and exercise on obesityrelated vascular dysfunction in children. Circulation. 2004;109:1981–1986. 16. Williams PT, Stefanick ML, Vranizan KM, Wood PD. The effects of weight loss by exercise or by dieting on plasma high-density lipoprotein (HDL) levels in men with low, intermediate, and normalto-high HDL at baseline. Metabolism. 1994;43:917–924. 17. Thompson PD, Yurgalevitch SM, Flynn MM, Zmuda JM, Spannaus-Martin D, Saritelli A et al. Effect of prolonged exercise training without weight loss on high-density lipoprotein metabolism in overweight men. Metabolism. 1997;46:217–223. 18. Nicklas BJ, Katzel LI, Busby-Whitehead J, Goldberg AP. Increases in high-density lipoprotein cholesterol with endurance exercise training are blunted in obese compared with lean men. Metabolism. 1997;46:556–561. 19. Becque MD, Katch VL, Rocchini AP, Marks CR, Moorehead C. Coronary risk incidence of obese adolescents: reduction by exercise plus diet intervention. Pediatrics. 1988;81:605–612. 20. Wabitsch M, Hauner H, Heinze E, Muche R, Bockmann A, Parthon W et al. Body-fat distribution and changes in the atherogenic risk-factor profile in obese adolescent girls during weight reduction. Amer J Clin Nutr. 1994;60:54–60. 21. Rocchini AP, Katch V, Anderson J, Hinderliter J, Becque D, Martin M, Marks C. Blood pressure in obese adolescents: effect of weight loss. Pediatrics. 1988;82:16–23. 22. Gutin B, Barbeau P, Owens S, Lemmon CR, Bauman M, Allison J et al. Effects of exercise intensity on cardiovascular fitness, total body composition, and visceral adiposity of obese adolescents. Amer J Clin Nutr. 2002;75:818–826. 23. Gutin B, Riggs S, Ferguson M, Owens S. Description and process evaluation of a physical training program for obese children. Res Q Exer Sport. 1999;70:65–69. 24. Epstein LH, Valoski AM, Vara LS, McCurley J, Wisniewski L, Kalarchian MA et al. Effects of decreasing sedentary behavior and increasing activity on weight change in obese children. Health Psychol. 1995;14:109–115. 25. Williams CL, Hayman LL, Daniels SR, Robinson TN, Steinberger J, Paridon S, Bazzarre T. Cardiovascular health in childhood: A statement for health professionals from the Committee on Atherosclerosis, Hypertension, and Obesity in the Young (AHOY) of the Council on Cardiovascular Disease in the Young, American Heart Association. Circulation. 2002;106:143–160. 26. Barbeau P, Gutin B, Litaker M, Owens S, Riggs S, Okuyama T. Correlates of individual differences in body-composition changes resulting from physical training in obese children. Amer J Clin Nutr. 1999;69:705–711.
Section 8 Internet-Based Approaches
Treatment 16 Internet-Based for Pediatric Obesity Donald A. Williamson, Heather Walden, Emily York-Crowe, and Tiffany M. Stewart CONTENTS Background ....................................................................................................................................201 Using the Internet for Weight Management..................................................................................202 HIPTeens ........................................................................................................................................202 Program Description.............................................................................................................202 Description of Internet Component .....................................................................................203 Measurement of Participation in the Internet-Based Interventions.....................................203 Non-Internet Aspects of the Study.......................................................................................204 Computer Training and Counseling Sessions ..........................................................204 Measurement of Body Weight at Home ..................................................................204 Initial Findings from the First 6 Months .............................................................................204 Summary and Conclusions ............................................................................................................206 Pros and Cons for Using the Internet ..................................................................................206 Feasibility of Internet-Based Interventions..........................................................................206 Future Directions ..................................................................................................................207 References ......................................................................................................................................207
BACKGROUND Advances in technology and the emphatic increase in the use of the Internet for shopping, making reservations, education, therapy, and live communication has radically changed modern communication. The use of Internet applications and electronic forms of communication continues to increase. Of all users, children and teenagers appear to use the Internet more than any other age group. About 90% of children between the ages of 5 and 17 years (47 million individuals) now use computers, and about 59% (31 million individuals) use the Internet [1]. Clinic-based treatments for weight loss can involve high costs and time commitments (e.g., travel to appointments, missed appointments because of illness, and missed school or work), which often result in poor adherence or increased attrition rates. Recent research has investigated the use of alternative means of delivering weight-loss interventions (e.g., interventions delivered via mail, telephone, or television) to remove some of these obstacles; however, few studies have tested using computers for the delivery of weight-loss or obesity treatment. There has also been little research investigating the efficacy of Internet-based treatment for weight loss. The capabilities of an Internet approach far exceed those of previous alternative methods, in which high-speed interaction and dissemination of large amounts of information is not possible. In addition, this method substantially increases accessibility to treatment for individuals who may not have the time or means to participate in clinic-based programs. Such a program used alone, or in addition to a clinic-based program with fewer face-to-face contact hours, can remove some of the obstacles related to standard behavioral 201
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programs and can improve compliance. This chapter reviews the results of studies that have tested the efficacy of Internet-based weight-loss programs and describes in detail one recent study that tested this approach for pediatric obesity.
USING THE INTERNET FOR WEIGHT MANAGEMENT Six papers, including two related to pediatric obesity, have reported the use of the Internet for the purpose of delivering a weight-management program. Four of the six studies focused exclusively on adults. The samples for all four adult studies were predominantly white, and all participants had Internet access at home or work before beginning the study. The research designs of two of the studies compared the efficacy of interactive Internet-based interventions with health education Web sites [2,3]. Both studies found a 2.5-kg difference between the two treatments at the end of 6 to 12 months. A third study tested the efficacy of an Internet-based intervention as a weightmaintenance strategy for adults who had lost weight using a face-to-face behavioral counseling approach [4]. The study reported negative results in that the Internet-based intervention did not yield good weight maintenance in comparison with face-to-face contact. A recent study reported no differences in weight-maintenance results between face-to-face contact and Internet support [5]. Thus, mixed evidence has been found for the efficacy of using the Internet as a means for yielding long-term weight maintenance. A fifth study, reported by Baronowski et al., tested the efficacy of an 8-week Internet-based intervention for overweight 8-year-old African-American girls [6]. The study did not yield significant weight changes in comparison with a control group. The sixth study, the Health Information Program for Teens (HIPTeens) project, is the only study that has reported the use of an Internetbased approach for weight loss in children or adolescents. The parents of these children were also overweight and were also targets of the Internet-based treatment. This study yielded body fat loss for the adolescent girls and greater weight loss for their parents, providing further support for Internet-based interventions for weight loss. The next section describes this Internet-based intervention and the preliminary results of the study that have been reported by White et al. [7].
HIPTEENS PROGRAM DESCRIPTION The HIPTeens project was designed to evaluate the efficacy of an Internet-based intervention for weight loss in overweight African-American girls in a randomized clinical trial. The intervention tested in the study was planned as a secondary prevention study for overweight African-American girls. The study enrolled 57 African-American adolescent girls (ages 11 to 15 years) who were overweight (body mass index [BMI] > 85th percentile for girls) and had at least one biological parent who was obese (BMI > 30). The participants were randomly assigned to an interactive, behavioral, Internet-based program or to a passive (noninteractive) Internet-based health education program, which served as the control condition. Parents of the girls were also participants in the study. All but one of the parents was the mother. Participants in both treatment groups met in face-to-face therapy sessions on four occasions over the first 12 weeks. In this project, two Web sites were developed: an interactive, behavioral, Internet-based program, and an Internet-based health education program. Data collection for HIPTeens has now spanned two consecutive years, and findings from the full 2-year period are currently being analyzed. To control for potential biases related to owning a computer and having access to the Internet, each family enrolled in the study was required to purchase a new computer at a greatly reduced cost and was provided free Internet access as long as they were active participants in the study. Individuals who were still unable to afford the computer at the reduced cost were eligible for an additional monetary scholarship toward the computer.
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TABLE 16.1 Description of the HIPTeens Web Site Components Online treatment sessions on health/nutrition, each including a quiz to assess comprehension Links to educational, health-related Web sites Interactive graph to track weight loss Interactive graph to track physical activity Behavioral contracts Interactive food monitoring worksheets with instant feedback on food choices Healthy menu ideas, including recipes Ability to e-mail case manager from site Treatment strategies emphasizing problem-solving, goal setting, and behavioral contracting Components promoting low-fat, low-calorie diet high in fruits and vegetables Structured programs to increase physical activity
DESCRIPTION
OF INTERNET
COMPONENT
The HIPTeens program is an Internet-based intervention that was designed to promote weight loss and long-term weight maintenance in overweight students (BMI > 85th percentile). An Internet/e-mail account was established for each participant after enrollment in the study. Participants recorded food intake, nutrient goals, physical activity, and behavioral goals on electronic forms that were then sent by e-mail to the research team. Parents and children were able to participate in the interactive program from home or from other places with Internet access. Each student was assigned an Internet counselor who provided support and instruction for health-related behavior change. The primary form of participant–counselor contact was e-mail messaging. The Web site included the following components: 52 lessons about healthy nutrition and exercise, problem-solving, eating patterns, and so on; links to other health Web sites related to nutrition, physical fitness, and health; automated interactive components (e.g., a self-monitoring program that provides immediate feedback about the quality of food choices made by the participant, based on the caloric and fat content of the food and number of servings within each Food Guide Pyramid category that is represented by each food); interactive components that allow the participant to graph body weight and minutes of physical activity over time by entering these values into the computer program; recipes for lowcalorie/low-fat meals; school menus for each day of the next week, with instructions on healthy foods that should be selected; and a calendar that describes upcoming local recreational events for children and adolescents during the next month that promote healthy eating and activity behavior. The basic components for the Internet-based behavioral intervention and the alternative health education intervention are outlined in Table 16.1.
MEASUREMENT
OF
PARTICIPATION
IN THE INTERNET-BASED INTERVENTIONS
The computer server automatically tracked use of the Web sites (by adolescents and parents). For both interventions, overall participation was measured by the number of “hits” per person to the Web site during the 6-month intervention. A “hit” was recorded each time the participant clicked (refreshed) to another page of the Web site. For the behavioral intervention, using the specific components of the program was also tracked. These components included completion of quizzes at the end of each weekly chapter, percentage of correct answers for each quiz, number of e-mails to Internet counselors, submission of body weight data to the weight graph component, and submission of number of minutes of physical activity to the physical activity graph component.
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NON-INTERNET ASPECTS
OF THE
STUDY
Computer Training and Counseling Sessions During the first 12 weeks of the program, the adolescent participant and her overweight/obese parent (in both treatment conditions) were scheduled to attend four face-to-face counseling sessions, at weeks 1, 3, 6, and 12. Participants in both treatment arms were reinforced (with small gifts) for attendance at face-to-face therapy sessions. At this time, participants and parents in both groups received additional training and help with problem solving, related to use of their computers and their access and using the Web site appropriate for treatment assignment (e.g., control or experimental). Participants in the behavioral treatment group also learned how to complete and submit monitoring records, quizzes, and graphs that were administered over the Internet. For the behavioral group, these four sessions focused on introduction to food monitoring and goal setting for nutrient intake, introduction to monitoring of physical activity and goal setting to yield a minimum of 150 minutes of physical activity per week by week 20, introduction to behavioral contracting with a goal of modeling appropriate strategies for behavioral contracting, and review of progress and problem solving to address poor adherence. Each of these sessions was coordinated with a module on the Web site that corresponded to the same goals. Participants in the control group received nutrition education from a registered dietitian but were not prescribed behavioral tasks to yield weight loss. Measurement of Body Weight at Home At the first face-to-face session, families in both treatment arms received an electronic scale that could be used to measure the body weight of the adolescent and participating parent every week. Participants were instructed to weigh at the same time of day (on awakening in the morning), with the same clothing, and after voiding to minimize extraneous influences on the measurement of total body weight. The participants in both treatment groups were prompted (via e-mail) to weigh at least once every 2 weeks and to send a record, via e-mail, of their body weight to the research team. Although the participants in both groups were able to plot their weight information on an individualized weight graph that provided visual feedback about the pattern of weight loss over time; only the behavioral group was provided with a similar graph to record minutes of physical activity.
INITIAL FINDINGS
FROM THE
FIRST 6 MONTHS
The initial results of the HIPTeens project are summarized in Figure 16.1. These data depict change scores from baseline. An intent-to-treat statistical methodology was used to test the hypothesis that the interactive behavioral program would yield greater fat/weight loss in comparison with the control arm for both adolescents and parents. During the first 6 months, seven participants dropped out of treatment (five behavioral and two control), and the baseline values for body weight (kg), body mass index (BMI–parents; BMI percentile–adolescents), and percentage body fat as measured by dual x-ray absorptiometry were carried forward to the 6-month period (i.e., no fat/weight changes were recorded). Over the course of the first 6 months of treatment, adolescents and parents in the behavioral treatment lost greater body fat/weight relative to the control condition. As can be seen in the graphs for BMI percentile and body weight, adolescents in the control group tended to gain weight, and these changes were greater than those for adolescents in the behavioral group. The BMI percentile of adolescents in the control condition also increased relative to baseline, whereas the BMI percentile of adolescents in the experimental condition decreased. Parents in both groups tended to lose weight, but this weight loss was statistically significant only for parents in the behavioral group. In summary, the hypothesis that the behavioral group would be more effective for fat/weight loss was supported by these preliminary findings.
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Adolescent
Parent
0.4
0.4
0.2
0.2 0
0 −0.2
Behavioral Control
−0.4
−0.2
Behavioral
−0.4
Control
−0.6
−0.6
−0.8
−0.8
−1
−1
−1.2
−1.2 % Body fat (DXA)
% Body fat (DXA)
0.9 0.7
0.9
0.5 0.3 0.1 −0.1 −0.3
Behavioral Control
−0.5 −0.7 −0.9
0.7 0.5 0.3
Behavioral Control
0.1 −0.1 −0.3 −0.5 −0.7 −0.9 Body mass index
Body mass index
2.5
1.5
2
1
1.5
0.5
1
Behavioral Control
0.5
0
Behavioral Control
−0.5
0
−1
−0.5
−1.5
−1
−2
−1.5
−2.5 Body weight
Body weight
FIGURE 16.1 Summary of the initial results of the HIPTeens study.
Using the Internet-based behavioral intervention was associated with decreased adiposity of the adolescents in the behavioral treatment group. Furthermore, parental use of the Web site and adolescent use of the Web site were positively correlated. In addition, a supportive family environment was positively correlated with both weight and fat loss in adolescents. For parents, reduction in dietary fat in the behavioral treatment group mediated weight loss. In general, the preliminary findings of this study indicated that adolescent weight loss was associated with a supportive family environment and with a parent who actively used the Internet-based weight management program. Consumer satisfaction with the HIPTeens program was high. Preliminary consumer satisfaction ratings at the end of 2 years indicated that 95% of the participants in both treatment arms reported that they enjoyed being in the HIPTeens program. Also, 100% of the participants in the behavioral arm and 96% of those in the health education arm had recommended the program to others. In summary, the HIP-Teens Internet-based behavioral intervention yielded positive initial results in terms of weight and fat loss. These results are comparable with findings from previous studies using minimal contact behavioral interventions in a primary care setting [8]. However, when comparing results of this study with results of more intensive, clinic-based weight-loss studies, the clinic-based approach appears to be more effective [9]. Additional studies are needed to investigate the applicability of this type of weight-loss approach for populations other than overweight adolescent African-American girls and their parents.
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SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS PROS
AND
CONS
FOR
USING
THE INTERNET
At present, the study of Internet-based interventions for weight loss or prevention of weight gain in pediatric obesity is limited to two investigations. Thus, this area of research is still in its infancy. There are numerous advantages of the Internet approach over a more traditional clinic-based approach, including the capability for rapid dissemination of health information, tracking of program use, live chats, and e-mail contacts with dieticians and therapists, as well as electronic recording and submission of participant’s weight, physical activity, and dietary data to clinic staff. In addition, this approach allows the researcher and clinician to reach a larger population because of the reduction in travel time and clinic visits, and the increased flexibility of program utilization. The reductions in travel time and clinic visits potentially serve to increase the cost-effectiveness of this approach. Finally, results from existing research indicate that participants appreciate and respond to this type of approach. Although an Internet-based approach for weight loss offers some unique opportunities and benefits, there are also some costs associated with having fewer face-to-face contact hours. For the Internet-based program, participants may need a high level of motivation and commitment, as there is less opportunity for motivational enhancement than in traditional face-to-face sessions. Furthermore, as there are fewer in-person contact hours with a therapist, it may be more difficult to establish rapport, and the participant may therefore feel less accountable for behavioral change.
FEASIBILITY
OF INTERNET-BASED INTERVENTIONS
Research to date investigating the efficacy of Internet-based approaches has yielded mixed results. Recent data from the HIPTeens project indicate that this approach can be efficacious, albeit less so than a more intensive, clinic-based program. Therefore, this type of approach may be more effective for people who need to lose smaller amounts of weight, rather than larger amounts, and may be most useful as a strategy for the prevention of weight gain in children, adolescents, and adults. Several important factors should be considered before proceeding with Internet-based weight-loss or weight-gain-prevention programs, including problems with and barriers to Internet access, computer and Internet literacy, and level of motivation of the intended population. To increase the likelihood of commitment and adherence by the children, it is essential that parents or other caregivers also become involved. Despite the greater accessibility of weight-loss interventions associated with an Internet-based approach, if the participant is inexperienced with this technology or is limited in motivation and support, such an approach may not be successful without additional training and motivational enhancement before program implementation. Another vital component of success for using the Internet for the delivery of weight-loss treatment is use by the participant. The participant must log onto the Web site for the intervention to be delivered and to increase the likelihood that the intervention will be effective. The HIPTeens program included a few face-to-face sessions but relied heavily on the individual to access the Web site from home. Incentives are sometimes necessary to motivate participants to use the Internet program, as well as perform certain behaviors that are in line with treatment goals. For this reason, participants in the HIPTeens program were awarded gift certificates for completion of clinic visits and questionnaires. Although these incentives were generally handed out in session or mailed to the participant, Internet technology allows for the delivery of on-line gift certificates via e-mail, which can be used to enhance program adherence and motivation. The overall effectiveness of online incentives to improve Web site utilization in an environmental approach to weight management is currently being investigated by our research team. Thus far, we have found that although it is possible to reinforce Web site utilization with on-line incentives, participants do not always redeem the gift certificates. The reasons for not redeeming certificates have included, but are not limited to, participants not wanting to use their credit cards on-line to order merchandise (to subsidize the
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amount of the gift certificate), and participants not wanting to go through the “trouble” of redeeming the gift certificates (going through the steps of redeeming the gift certificates online). Several participants also reported that although instructions were clearly presented and simple to follow, they did not fully understand how to redeem the gift certificate and, as a result, did not follow through. However, through online surveys, we are able to identify such problems and are able to aid participants in overcoming simple obstacles to redeeming their certificates; we can also assist them if they desire to redeem certificates they have earned in the past.
FUTURE DIRECTIONS To maximize the effectiveness of any intervention, it is ideal to include any physical and social environments that may influence the behavior of the individual (e.g., parents, teachers, school, home environment). Our ideas for future research include investigating the efficacy of an Internetbased approach for weight management and health promotion delivered in a classroom setting. This type of program could be developed and implemented in a school setting by creating a program that uses the Internet for presentation and education about weight loss or weight gain prevention behaviors, developing a classroom curriculum-based program to accompany the Internet program, training teachers to present this information to the children, and allowing the children to log on to the Internet to use the program at school and at home. We hope that this approach might empower children to become “agents” of behavioral change, resulting in a carryover of the newly learned behaviors from the school environment to the home environment. In summary, we suspect that the use of Internet-based interventions may be only part of the solution for pediatric obesity and that more broad-based environmental programs may be required to curtail the current rates of obesity. Nevertheless, there appears to be a place for Internet-based approaches, and these approaches may be quite useful for widespread dissemination of health information and for Internet counseling for children and adolescents who need to lose weight but find attending clinics unfeasible or impractical because of time or travel constraints.
REFERENCES 1. U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics. Computer and Internet Use by Children and Adolescents in 2001, NCES 2004-014. Washington, DC, 2003. Available at http://nces.ed.gov/pubsearch/pubsinfo.asp?pubid=2004014. 2. Tate, DF, Wing, RR, & Winett, RA. Using Internet technology to deliver a behavioral weight loss program. JAMA. 2001;285:1172–1177. 3. Tate, DF, Jackvony, EH, & Wing, RR. Effects of Internet behavioral counseling on weight loss in adults at risk for type 2 diabetes: a randomized trial. JAMA. 2003; 289:1833–1836. 4. Harvey-Berino, J, Pintauro, S, Buzzell, P, DiGiulio, M, Casey Gold, B, Moldovan, C, & Ramirez, E. Does using the Internet facilitate the maintenance of weight loss? Int J Obes Metabol Dis. 2002;26:1254–1260. 5. Harvey-Berino J, Pintauro S, Buzzell P, & Gold EC. Effect of Internet support on the long-term maintenance of weight loss. Obes Res. 2004;12:320–329. 6. Baronowski, T, Baronowski, JC, Cullen, KW, Thompson, DI, Nicklas, T, Zakeri, IE, & Rochon, J. The Fun, Food, and Fitness Project (FFFP): The Baylor GEMS pilot study. Ethnicity Dis. 2003;13:S30–S39. 7. White, MA, Davis Martin, P, Newton, RL, Walden, HM, York-Crowe, EE, Gordon, ST et al. Mediators of weight loss in a family-based intervention presented over the Internet. Obes Res. 2004;12:1–10. 8. Saelens BE, Sallis JF, Wilfley DE, Patrick K, Cella JA, Buchta R. Behavioral weight control for overweight adolescents initiated in primary care. Obes Res. 2002;10:22–32. 9. Berkowitz RI, Wadden TA, Tershakovec AM, Cronquist JL. Behavior therapy and sibutramine for the treatment of adolescent obesity: a randomized controlled trial. JAMA. 2003;289:1805–1812.
Section 9 Pharmacology
Treatment 17 Pharmacologic of Adolescent Obesity Canice E. Crerand, Thomas A. Wadden, and Robert I. Berkowitz CONTENTS Introduction ....................................................................................................................................211 Pharmacological Agents for the Treatment of Obesity.................................................................212 Use of Orlistat with Adolescents and Children.............................................................................212 Safety and Efficacy Trials ....................................................................................................212 Open-Label Trials.................................................................................................................213 Orlistat and Vitamin and Mineral Absorption .....................................................................214 Orlistat’s Use in Children.....................................................................................................214 Use of Sibutramine with Adolescents ...........................................................................................214 Safety and Efficacy Trials ....................................................................................................215 Metformin.......................................................................................................................................216 Clinical Implications and Conclusions ..........................................................................................216 References ......................................................................................................................................217
INTRODUCTION The prevalence of obesity in children and adolescents is increasing at an alarming rate. According to the most recent data, 16% of American children ages 6 to 19 years are overweight (defined as body mass index [BMI] ≥ 95th percentile), and 31% are considered to be at risk for overweight (defined as BMI ≥ 85th percentile) [1]. Equally alarming, the incidence of weight-related comorbidities, such as type 2 diabetes, has also increased in youth [2,3]. Investigators fear that the progression of such diseases may be hastened by their early age of onset [4]. Furthermore, up to 80% of obese adolescents will become obese adults [5,6], thus placing them at risk for developing obesity-related comorbidities, including cardiovascular disease, hyperlipidemia, cancer, sleep disorders, and gallbladder disease [7,8]. In addition to its adverse effects on physical health, obesity in youth frequently has a negative psychosocial effect. One study reported that women who had been obese as adolescents were poorer, less educated, and less likely to be married than were women who had been normal weight as teenagers [9]. Quality of life in obese teens and children has been found to be comparable to that of children with cancer [10]. These disturbing statistics leave little doubt that effective treatments for adolescent obesity are now needed more than ever. Even with the best behavioral treatments, however, only about half of children maintain their weight losses long-term [11,12]. These findings have led to continuing interest in pharmacologic treatment of adolescent obesity. As with the management of adult obesity, pharmacotherapy for the treatment of adolescent obesity has had a checkered history. Many agents, although initially promising, were later found to do more harm than good. For example, amphetamines were once considered to be effective 211
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treatments for obesity. However, concerns about abuse and tolerance arose, and the American Academy of Pediatrics issued a statement discouraging the use of such medications in children and adolescents [13]. In 1997, fenfluramine, which had shown promise in treating adult and adolescent obesity, was removed from the market because of its association with valvular heart disease [14,15]. More recently, a randomized, placebo controlled trial of ephedrine combined with caffeine appeared to improve weight loss in obese adolescents [16]. However, ephedrine was removed from the market in 2004 because of concerns about dangerous short- and long-term cardiovascular effects [17,18]. Thus, the use of pharmacotherapy in adolescents remains controversial, principally because of concerns about side effects and the unknown long-term effect of pharmacological agents on growth, metabolism, and development. Nonetheless, pharmacotherapy still holds promise as an adjunctive treatment for adolescent obesity. This chapter reviews the literature on the pharmacological treatment of adolescent obesity, offers suggestions for clinical practice, and concludes with priorities for future research.
PHARMACOLOGICAL AGENTS FOR THE TREATMENT OF OBESITY At present, two medications, orlistat and sibutramine, have been approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the induction of weight loss in adults. Orlistat (Xenical®) is a gastric and pancreatic lipase inhibitor that causes weight loss by blocking the absorption of dietary fat, which is excreted in stool [19–21]. Orlistat is not centrally absorbed, and side effects are primarily gastrointestinal in nature. They include production of oily, fatty stools; increased flatulence; and fecal leakage. Sibutramine (Meridia®) is a combined norepinephrine-serotonin reuptake inhibitor that is associated with increased satiation and a resulting reduction in food intake [22–24]. Side effects include constipation, headache, and dry mouth. Of greater concern are increases in blood pressure and pulse rate. Randomized, controlled trials of these medications in adults have demonstrated weight losses of 7 to 10% when combined with an energy-deficit diet [19,20,22,25]. However, sibutramine is only indicated for use in individuals ages 16 years and older. In December 2003, the FDA approved the use of orlistat in children between the ages of 12 and 16 years, thus making it the only FDAapproved medication for use in adolescents. To date, few studies have investigated the use of these medications in treating adolescent and childhood obesity. Other agents of interest for the treatment of adolescent obesity include metformin (Glucophage®), a medication that inhibits hepatic glucose production, and recombinant leptin replacement therapy, a treatment for congenital leptin deficiency. Metformin is currently indicated for the treatment of type 2 diabetes in adults and children ages 10 years and older [26]. In addition to regulating glucose levels, metformin appears to induce weight loss (typically about 2 kg), even in nondiabetic adults [27,28]. Side effects of metformin include nausea, flatulence, bloating, diarrhea, vitamin B12 deficiencies, and in rare cases, lactic acidosis. Few studies to date have investigated the efficacy of metformin for the treatment of adolescent obesity. Congenital leptin deficiency has been identified as the cause of severe, early onset obesity in a handful of children [29]. Recombinant leptin therapy has been found to result in substantial weight loss among children with this disorder [30,31]. However, recombinant leptin therapy for obese children and adolescents who do not suffer from congenital leptin deficiencies has yet to be investigated. Studies of adults have shown modest weight losses of 4 to 8% of initial weight [32].
USE OF ORLISTAT WITH ADOLESCENTS AND CHILDREN SAFETY
AND
EFFICACY TRIALS
The largest study of orlistat with obese adolescents was conducted by the makers of orlistat, Roche Pharmaceuticals [33]. This 1-year, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind study evaluated the safety and efficacy of the medication in 539 obese adolescents. Following a 2-week placebo
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run-in phase, participants were randomly assigned to receive either orlistat (120 mg, TID) or placebo. All participants were instructed to consume a reduced-calorie diet that provided no more than 30% of calories from fat. They received nutritional and behavioral counseling throughout the study and were instructed to take a daily multivitamin. Adolescents treated with orlistat plus diet had a significantly reduced BMI compared with patients who received placebo plus diet. According to Roche, 27% of participants who received orlistat achieved a 5% or greater reduction in BMI, compared with 16% of subjects on placebo; 13% of those treated with orlistat and 4.5% of the placebo group attained a 10% or greater reduction in baseline BMI [33,34]. Gastrointestinal events (e.g., fatty/oily stool, oily spotting, and oily evacuation) were the most commonly reported adverse events, with 50% of the orlistat group and 8% of the placebo group reporting symptoms [33]. No deaths occurred during the course of this study. The results of this trial led the FDA to approve orlistat for use in persons 12 to 16 years of age.
OPEN-LABEL TRIALS An open-label study of obese adolescents provides further evidence of the safety and tolerability of orlistat. McDuffie and colleagues evaluated the medication in 20 obese adolescents (10 males, 10 females) who had at least one obesity-related comorbid condition, such as hyperinsulinemia, hyperlipidemia, hypertension, type 2 diabetes, or impaired glucose tolerance [35]. Participants had a mean age of 14.6 ± 2.0 years (range of 12 to 17.9 years) and BMI of 44.1 ± 12.6 kg/m2. Orlistat treatment was provided for 12 weeks as an adjunct to a behavioral weight loss program. Adolescents and their parents received nutritional counseling and were instructed to adhere to a 500-caloriedeficit diet that provided no more than 30% of calories from fat. Participants were instructed to take orlistat (120 mg) three times per day with meals. They were also instructed to take a daily multivitamin. Eighty-five percent of participants completed the 3-month study. Participants lost 4.4 ± 4.6 kg, equal to 3.8 ± 4.1% of initial weight. Improvements were noted in low-density lipoprotein and total cholesterol levels, fasting glucose and insulin levels, and insulin sensitivity. Participants reported taking 80% of prescribed doses of orlistat, and only one participant withdrew because of side effects. Nearly all participants reported at least two side effects, and more than 50% of the sample reported increased defecation, soft stools, fatty or oily stools, oily spotting on clothing, and increased flatus [35]. McDuffie et al. recently published a 6-month follow-up of this sample [36]. After completing the first 3 months of behavior modification and orlistat, participants continued the medication and returned for assessments at three monthly follow-up visits. Fifteen of the 20 participants completed 6 months of treatment. At this time, participants had lost 3.5 ± 6.0% of initial body weight. Similar to the 3-month outcome data, improvements in total and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol were noted, as well as improvements in fasting glucose and insulin levels and insulin sensitivity. At 6 months, an 81% medication adherence rate was reported. According to pill counts, participants took an average of 75% of possible doses. Participants attributed nonadherence to skipping meals, eating fat-free meals, snacking instead of eating a full meal, and concerns about taking the medication at school. Two participants discontinued orlistat on their own before the completion of the study. Caucasian adolescents lost significantly more weight than African-American participants (7.3 vs. 0.8 kg, respectively, after 6 months of orlistat). The authors noted that this finding could be, in part, a result of known differences in resting energy expenditure in African Americans and Caucasians. Further studies are needed to confirm the smaller losses in African Americans. The authors also noted that more gastrointestinal side effects were reported in these younger participants compared with the number typically reported by adults [35]. The authors speculated that this finding may reflect greater difficulty in adolescents in adhering to a low-fat diet. Participants in this sample reported skipping doses when consuming high-fat meals to prevent unwanted side effects.
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Additional randomized, placebo-controlled trials of orlistat with larger samples of adolescents are needed to determine whether the medication is more effective than a comprehensive behavioral program used alone. Studies of longer duration also are needed to further assess the long-term safety, tolerability, and efficacy of orlistat in adolescents.
ORLISTAT
AND
VITAMIN
AND
MINERAL ABSORPTION
An industry-sponsored trial investigated the effect of orlistat on mineral balance over 3 weeks of treatment in 27 obese adolescents [37]. This double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study found that orlistat inhibited dietary fat by 27%. This inhibition of fat absorption, however, did not significantly affect mineral balance (e.g., calcium, phosphorus, magnesium, zinc, and copper) compared with placebo. These findings support the safety of orlistat’s use with adolescents, although longer-term studies are needed. Another study examined the effects of orlistat on fat-soluble vitamins (e.g., vitamins A, D, E, and K) over a 3- to 6-month period in a sample of 17 obese adolescents [38]. Acute absorption of vitamin A was not altered by orlistat treatment; however, absorption of vitamin E decreased significantly over the course of the study. Serum levels of vitamins A and E remained similar from baseline to the end of treatment, and serum levels of vitamin K decreased by the end of treatment, although not significantly. Finally, serum vitamin D levels decreased from baseline following 1 month of treatment. However, this finding may be in part a result of the consistently lower levels of vitamin D among African-American participants. Three African-American participants required vitamin D supplementation after 1 month, in addition to taking a multivitamin. Results indicate that vitamin D concentrations should be monitored, particularly among African-American adolescents [38].
ORLISTAT’S USE
IN
CHILDREN
One study to date has examined orlistat’s tolerance, safety, and psychosocial effects in a sample of 11 healthy, obese, prepubertal children [39]. In this open-label, 12-week clinical trial, the median age of participants was 10.7 years (range, 8.3 to 12.3 years). Children were treated with a standard dose of 120 mg orlistat, taken three times daily. Parents or guardians were provided with information regarding dietary sources of fat and recommendations for their child’s fat intake while taking orlistat. No other dietary or behavioral intervention was provided. At the end of the 12 weeks, the median weight loss was 4.0 kg (range, 12.7 to +2.5 kg). Over 98% of the capsules were taken (as measured by self-report and pill counts). Children reported increased control over their eating and greater avoidance of high-fat foods, as measured by the Children’s Eating Attitudes Test. All children reportedly experienced loose stools. Four children reported frequent diarrhea or increased flatulence. However, no participants discontinued treatment because of side effects. Levels of vitamin A decreased significantly with orlistat, although they were still in the normal reference interval. This study’s findings appear to be positive. However, they must be viewed in light of several limitations, principally the small sample size, open-label design, and short duration. Randomized, placebo-controlled trials of orlistat are needed in obese children before the medication can be recommended for use in this population.
USE OF SIBUTRAMINE WITH ADOLESCENTS Experimental studies indicate that sibutramine may be of potential benefit in the treatment of obese adolescents. At present, however, the medication is not approved for persons younger than 16 years of age.
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AND
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Berkowitz and colleagues conducted the first randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of sibutramine in a sample of 82 adolescents ages 13 to 17 years with a BMI range of 32 to 44 kg/m2 [40]. Exclusion criteria for this trial included the presence of cardiovascular disease, types 1 or 2 diabetes, major psychiatric disorders, or pregnancy; cigarette smoking; use of medications not recommended with sibutramine; and use of medications known to induce weight gain (e.g., oral steroids). For the first 6 months of the study, participants were assigned to a sibutramine plus behavior or a placebo plus behavior therapy. Those randomly assigned to sibutramine received a 5 mg/day dose, which was gradually increased to 15 mg/day by week 7. Adolescents treated with sibutramine plus behavior therapy lost an average of 7.8 ± 6.3 kg (i.e., 8.5 ± 6.8% reduction in BMI) whereas those assigned to placebo lost a significantly smaller 3.2 ± 6.1 kg (i.e., 4.0 ± 5.4% reduction in BMI). Sibutramine-treated participants also reported significantly greater reductions in hunger, as measured by the Eating Inventory, than adolescents assigned to placebo. Nineteen of the 43 participants treated with sibutramine initially experienced significant increases in blood pressure and pulse rate, which led to dose reductions. The medication was discontinued in five participants who experienced significant, sustained increases in blood pressure. During months 7 to 12, all participants received sibutramine in an open-label fashion. Adolescents who were initially assigned to placebo lost an additional 1.3 kg, whereas those assigned to sibutramine maintained their weight loss through month 12. From baseline to month 12, participants originally assigned to sibutramine lost 7.0 ± 9.3 kg (i.e., 8.6 ± 9.9% of initial BMI), compared with 4.5 ± 8.8 kg (i.e., 6.4% ± 8.3% of initial BMI) for those initially assigned to the placebo and later converted to sibutramine. Godoy-Matos and colleagues also conducted a randomized, placebo-controlled trial of sibutramine with adolescents [41]. This study included 60 Brazilian youth who were 14 to 17 years of age, were free of weight-related comorbidities, and had a BMI range of 30 to 45 kg/m2. Participants were initially prescribed placebo and an energy-deficit diet for a 1-month run-in period. They received dietary counseling and instructions to increase their physical activity to a minimum of 30 minutes per day. Participants were then randomly assigned to either placebo or sibutramine (10 mg/day) for the next 6 months. No additional behavioral counseling was provided. At 6 months, adolescents assigned to sibutramine had lost 10.3 ± 6.6 kg, compared with 2.4 ± 2.5 kg in the placebo group. Aside from constipation, no serious adverse events were reported, including any events related to increased blood pressure or pulse rate. No participants discontinued the trial because of cardiovascular changes. Weight loss reported in this study was greater than that obtained by Berkowitz et al. [40], although sibutramine was administered in a lower dose and without behavioral treatment. The authors suggested that their finding of greater weight loss might be a result of cultural and ethnic differences in the food environment in Brazil compared with that found in the United States. Differences in cardiovascular side effects in the two studies may have been caused by the lower dose of sibutramine used in the Brazilian investigation. A multisite, randomized, placebo-controlled trial designed to further investigate the safety and efficacy of sibutramine in 498 obese adolescents is currently underway [42]. Safety and efficacy findings appear to be similar to those reported by Berkowitz et al. [40], with statistically significant improvements in BMI in the sibutramine-treated participants. Data indicate that obese adolescents’ response to sibutramine is similar to that of adults, including side effects of increased blood pressure and pulse rate. Further study is needed of the optimal dose of sibutramine (with adolescents) to induce weight loss but minimize these cardiovascular side effects. Similarly, further investigation is needed of the amount of behavioral counseling required with sibutramine, given the disparate protocols used by Berkowitz et al. and GoydosMatos et al. Studies of the long-term (>1 year) risks and benefits with adolescents also are needed.
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METFORMIN An early study investigated metformin with nine nondiabetic obese children (ages 8 to 14 years) [43]. In this open-label trial, participants received metformin (500 mg, TID) and dietary counseling. After 3 months, they lost 10.9 ± 4.1 kg. These promising results, however, should be viewed in light of methodological limitations that include a small sample size and an open-label design. More recently, Freemark and Bursey conducted a 6-month, randomized, placebo-controlled study of the effects of metformin (500 mg, BID) on BMI [44]. Participants were 29 obese adolescents, ages 12 to 19 years, who had a BMI greater than 30 kg/m2, hyperinsulinemia, and a family history of type 2 diabetes. Participants were not instructed to make any dietary modifications. At 6 months, BMI fell 1.3% in metformin-treated participants, compared with an increase of 2.3% in the placebo group. Metformin-treated participants experienced significant reductions in fasting glucose and insulin levels compared with those treated with placebo. Seven metformin-treated participants reported abdominal discomfort and diarrhea. However, these side effects were mild and resolved over time. Persistent nausea led to a dose reduction in one participant, but no adolescents discontinued treatment because of side effects. Kay and colleagues conducted an 8-week, randomized, placebo-controlled trial of metformin (850 mg, BID) in 24 adolescents (ages 14 to 16 years, mean BMI of 41 kg/m2) [45]. All participants were instructed to consume a 1500 to 1800 kcal/day diet. Those treated with metformin and diet lost 6.5 ± 0.8% of initial weight, compared with 3.8 ± 0.4% in the placebo group. Significantly greater decreases in fasting insulin, plasma leptin, cholesterol, triglycerides, and free fatty acids also were found in metformin-treated adolescents. Minimal side effects (e.g., mild nausea) were reported in five participants, but no adolescents discontinued participation because of these complaints. Results of these trials indicate that metformin, in combination with a low-calorie diet, may provide modest weight losses and reductions in fasting glucose and insulin levels for adolescents with obesity and risk factors for type 2 diabetes. Metformin appears to be well tolerated in this age group. However, larger studies of longer duration are needed.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS AND CONCLUSIONS Pharmacotherapy appears to be a promising tool to aid in the treatment of adolescent obesity. Orlistat is currently the only antiobesity agent with an indication for use in adolescents (12 to 16 years of age). Sibutramine also appears to be beneficial with adolescents, but its use must be considered experimental, at this time, in persons below the age of 16 years. Studies of metformin demonstrate modest weight reductions in samples of adolescents with insulin resistance. However, metformin is not currently indicated for weight reduction in this population. Studies indicate that these medications are fairly well tolerated in adolescents. However, sibutramine has not been studied in adolescents with obesity-related comorbidities, and it may be inappropriate for adolescents with hypertension or other complications. Because orlistat does not have systemic side effects, it may be considered to be a “safer” medication compared with sibutramine and metformin. However, orlistat’s gastrointestinal side effects may be intolerable and potentially embarrassing for teenagers. At present, no long-term data (i.e., beyond 1 year) exist regarding the safety, efficacy, and tolerability of weight-loss medications in adolescents. In addition, there have been no head-to-head comparisons of the medications. Thus, although sibutramine appears to induce greater weight losses in adolescents compared with orlistat or metformin, additional studies are needed to confirm these observations. Additional investigations are needed to assess the risk–benefit profile of different doses of these medications, such that weight loss is maximized without causing undue risk of side effects. Data regarding the potential additive benefit of combining pharmacotherapy with behavioral treatments are especially needed. Long-term medication adherence and the role of pharmacotherapy in promoting weight maintenance also require further empirical attention.
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Investigators have suggested that intensive treatments, such as pharmacotherapy, may be appropriate for seriously obese adolescents with comorbidities [46,47], particularly as these individuals are likely to become obese adults. However, with the exception of orlistat, antiobesity agents should be viewed as experimental until safety and effectiveness are further established [48]. In light of the history of pharmacological agents in the treatment of obesity, it is likely best to proceed with caution in using these agents in young persons, and as Dietz [49] suggests, to use them only as “adjuncts to behavior modification, family therapy, and increased activity” (p. 55).
REFERENCES 1. Hedley AA, Ogden CL, Johnson CL, Carroll MD, Curtin LR, Flegal, KM. Prevalence of overweight and obesity among US children, adolescents, and adults, 1999-2002. JAMA 2004; 291:2847–2950. 2. Rosenbloom AL, Joe JR, Young RS, Winter WE. Emerging epidemic of type 2 diabetes in youth. Diabetes Care 1999; 22:345–354. 3. Pinhas-Hamiel O, Dolan LM, Daniels SR, Standiford D, Khoury PR, Zeitler P. Increased incidence of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus among adolescents. J Pediatr 1996; 128:608–615. 4. Styne DM. Childhood and adolescent obesity. Pediatr Clin North Am 2001; 48:823–847. 5. Casey VA, Dwyer JT, Coleman KA, Valadian I. Body mass index from childhood to middle age: a 50-year follow-up. Am J Clin Nutr 1992; 56:14–18. 6. Garn SM, Sullivan TV, Hawthorne VM. Fatness and obesity of the parents of obese individuals. Am J Clin Nutr 1989; 50:1308–1313. 7. Pi-Sunyer F. Medical hazards of obesity. Ann Intern Med 1993; 119:655–660. 8. National Research Council Committee on Diet and Health. Diet and Health: Implications for Reducing Chronic Disease Risk. Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 1989. 9. Gortmaker SL, Must A, Perrin JM, Sobol AM, Dietz WH. Social and economic consequences of overweight in adolescence and young adulthood. New Engl J Med 1993; 329:1008–1012. 10. Schwimmer JB, Burwinkle TM, Varni JW. Health-related quality of life in severely obese children and adolescents. JAMA 2003; 289:1812–1819. 11. Epstein LH, Valoski A, Wing RR, McCurley J. Ten-year follow-up of behavioral, family-based treatment for obese children. JAMA 1990; 264:2519–2523. 12. Epstein LH, Valoski A, Wing RR, McCurley J. Ten-year outcomes of behavioral, family-based treatment for childhood obesity. Health Psychol 1994; 13:373–383. 13. American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Nutrition. Factors affecting food intake. Pediatrics 1964; 33:135–143. 14. Connolly HM, Crary JL, McGoon MD, Hensrud DD, Edwards BS, Edwards WD, Schaff HV. Valvular heart disease associated with fenfluramine-phentermine. N Engl J Med 1997; 337:581–588. 15. Bowen R, Glicklich A, Kahn M, Rasmussen S, Wadden TA, Bilstad J et al. Cardiac valvulopathy associated with exposure to fenfluramine or dexfenfluramine: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Interim Public Health Recommendations. Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 1997; 46:1061–1066. 16. Molnár D, Török K, Erhardt E, Jeges S. Safety and efficacy of treatment with an ephedrine/caffeine mixture. The first double-blind placebo-controlled pilot study in adolescents. Int J Obes 2000; 24:1573–1578. 17. Food and Drug Administration. Final rule declaring dietary supplements containing ephedrine alkaloids adulterated because they present an unreasonable risk. Fed Regist. 2004; 69:6787–6854. 18. McBride BF, Karapanos AK, Krudysz A, Kluger J, Coleman CI, White CM. Electrocardiographic and hemodynamic effects of a multicomponent dietary supplement containing ephedra and caffeine: a randomized controlled trial. JAMA 2004; 291:216–221. 19. Sjostrom L, Rissanen A, Andersen T, Boldrin M, Golay A, Koppeschaar HPF, Krempf M, for the European Multicentre Orlistat Study Group. Randomized placebo-controlled trial of orlistat for weight loss and prevention of weight regain in obese patients. Lancet 1998; 352:167–172. 20. Davidson MH, Hauptman J, DiGirolamo M, Foreyt JP, Halsted CH, Heber D et al. Weight control and risk factor reduction in obese subjects treated for 2 years with orlistat: a randomized controlled trial. JAMA 1999; 281:235–242.
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21. Hill JO, Hauptman J, Anderson JW, Fujioka K, O’Neil PM, Smith DK et al. Orlistat, a lipase inhibitor, for weight maintenance after conventional dieting: a 1-year study. Am J Clin Nutr 1999; 69:1108–1116. 22. Bray GA, Ryan DH, Heidingsfelder S, Cerise F, Wilson K. A double-blind randomized placebocontrolled trial of sibutramine. Obes Res 1997; 4:263–270. 23. Rolls BJ, Shide DJ, Thorwart ML, Ulbrecht JS. Sibutramine reduces food intake in non-dieting women with obesity. Obes Res 1997; 6:1–11. 24. Hansen DL, Toubro S, Stock MJ, Macdonald IA, Astrup A. The effect of sibutramine on energy expenditure and appetite during chronic treatment without dietary restriction. Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord 1999; 23:1016–1024. 25. Lean MEJ. A review of clinical efficacy. Int J Obes 1997; 21:30S–36S. 26. Bristol Myers Squibb Company. Glucophage® Package Insert. Princeton, NJ. Available at: http://www. glucophagexr.com/ (accessed February 2005). 27. Lee A, Morley JE. Metformin decreases food consumption and induces weight loss in subjects with obesity and type II non-insulin-dependent diabetes. Obes Res 1998; 6:47–53. 28. Fontbonne A, Charles MA, Juhan-Vague I, Bard JM, Andre P, Isnard F et al. The effect of metformin on the metabolic abnormalities associated with upper-body fat distribution. Diabetes Care 1996; 19:920–926. 29. Montague CT, Farooqi IS, Whitehead JP, Soos MA, Rau H, Wareham NJ et al. Congenital leptin deficiency is associated with severe early-onset obesity in humans. Nature 1997; 387:903–908. 30. Farooqi IS, Jebb SA, Langmack G, Lawrence E, Cheetham CH, Prentice AM et al. Effects of recombinant leptin therapy in a child with congenital leptin deficiency. N Engl J Med 1999; 341(12):879–884. 31. Gibson WT, Farooqi IS, Moreau M, DePaoli AM, Lawrence E, O’Rahilly S, Trussell RA. Congenital leptin deficiency due to homozygosity for the 133G mutation: report of another case and evaluation of response to four years of leptin therapy. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2004; 89(10):4821–4826 32. Heymsfield SB, Greenberg AS, Fujioka K, Dixon RM, Kushner R, Hunt T et al. Recombinant leptin for weight loss in obese and lean adults. JAMA 1999; 282(6): 1568–1575. 33. Roche Laboratories, Incorporated. Xenical ® use in pediatric and adolescent patients. Nutley, NJ. Available at: http://www.rocheusa.com/ppi/pdfs/Xenical/090f42548009c9ab.PDF (accessed February 2005). 34. Roche Laboratories, Incorporated. Xenical ® Package Insert. Nutley, NJ. Available at: http://www. rocheusa.com/products/xenical/pi.pdf (accessed February 2005). 35. McDuffie JR, Calis KA, Uwaifo GI, Sebring NG, Fallon EM, Hubbard VS, Yanovski JA. Three-month tolerability of orlistat in adolescents with obesity-related comorbid conditions. Obes Res 2002; 10(7):642–650. 36. McDuffie JR, Calis KA, Uwaifo GI, Sebring NG, Fallon EM, Frazer TE et al. Efficacy of orlistat as an adjunct to behavioral treatment in overweight African-American and Caucasian adolescents with obesity-related co-morbid conditions. J Ped Endocrinol Metab 2004; 17:307–319. 37. Zhi JZ, Moore R, Kanitra L. The effect of short-term (21-day) orlistat treatment on the physiologic balance of six selected macrominerals and microminerals in obese adolescents. J Am Coll Nutr 2003; 22(5):357–362. 38. McDuffie JR, Calis KA, Booth SL, Uwaifo GI, Yanovski JA. Effects of orlistat on fat-soluble vitamins in obese adolescents. Pharmacotherapy 2002; 22(7):814–822. 39. Norgren S, Danielsson P, Jurold R, Lötborn M, Marcus C. Orlistat treatment in obese prepubertal children: a pilot study. Acta Pædiatr 2003; 92:666–670. 40. Berkowitz RI, Wadden TA, Tershakovee AM, Cronquist JL. Behavior therapy and sibutramine for the treatment of adolescent obesity. JAMA 2003; 289(14):1805–1812. 41. Godoy-Matos A, Carraro L, Vieira A, Oliviera J, Guedes EP, Mattos L et al. Treatment of obese adolescents with sibutramine: a randomized, double-blind, controlled study. J Clin Endocrinol Metabol. 2004. Available at: http://jcem.endojournals.org/ cgi/rapidpdf/jc.2004-0263v1 (accessed February 2005). 42. Berkowitz RI, Fukjioka K, Hewkin A, Walch J, Peng J, Blakesley V, Renz C. Results of a doubleblind, placebo-controlled study to evaluate treatment of obese adolescents with sibutramine — efficacy and safety. North American Association for the Study of Obesity’s Annual Meeting, Las Vegas, NV, November 14–18, 2004.
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43. Lutjens A, Smit JL. Effect of biguanide treatment in obese children. Helvetica Paediat Acta 1977; 31(6):473–480. 44. Freemark M, Bursey D. The effects of metformin on body mass index and glucose tolerance in obese adolescents with fasting hyperinsulinemia and a family history of type 2 diabetes. Pediatrics 2001; 107(4):55–61 45. Kay JP, Alemzadeh R, Langley G, D’Angelo L, Smith P, Holshouser S. Beneficial effects of metformin in normoglycemic morbidly obese adolescents. Metabolism 2001; 50(12):1457–1461. 46. Yanovski JA. Intensive therapies for pediatric obesity. Pediat Clin N Am 2001; 48(4):1041–1053. 47. Berkowitz RI, Lyke JA, Wadden TA. Treatment of child and adolescent obesity. In: Johnston FE, Foster GD, Eds. Obesity, Growth and Development. London: Smith-Gordon, 2001:169–184. 48. Yanovski JA, Yanovski SZ. Treatment of pediatric and adolescent obesity. JAMA 2003; 289(14):1851–1853. 49. Dietz WH. Pharmacotherapy for childhood obesity? Maybe for some. Obes Res 1994; 2(1):54–55.
Section 10 Surgery
Management 18 Surgical of Pediatric Obesity Thomas Inge, Meg Zeller, Shelley Kirk, and Stephen Daniels CONTENTS Introduction ....................................................................................................................................223 Primary Care Provider Considerations before Referral of Surgical Candidates ..........................223 Comprehensive Team Assessment of the Patient Referred for Bariatric Surgery........................226 Postoperative Management ............................................................................................................228 Final Words of Caution..................................................................................................................230 Summary ........................................................................................................................................231 References ......................................................................................................................................231
INTRODUCTION Surgery has been used for the treatment of clinically severe obesity for almost a half century in the United States. Bariatric surgery is a valuable and proven therapy for obese adults, and several individual procedures were endorsed in 1991 by a Consensus Development Conference of the National Institutes of Health [1]. Largely because of the clearly demonstrated adverse effects of adult obesity on all-cause mortality [2], bariatric surgery is recommended for those adults with a body mass index [BMI] 40 kg/m2 or above and for those 35 kg/m2 or above with severe medical comorbidities who have failed prior nonsurgical obesity management attempts. Today, extreme obesity is no longer a disease limited to adults. Pediatric specialists are increasingly confronted with a new set of diagnostic and therapeutic dilemmas in severely and extremely obese children and adolescents. At the time National Institutes of Health bariatric guidelines were established, those patients 18 years of age or younger were not included. Thus, recently a multidisciplinary group of pediatric specialists with national representation convened to develop guidelines for adolescent bariatric surgery based on clinical practice and existing evidence [3]. Issues unique to adolescents include the possibility of adverse effects of bariatric surgery on growth and development, concerns about the ability to completely prepare an adolescent for an intervention that changes eating patterns for life, possible effects on future reproductive outcomes, and possible deficiency syndromes if macro- or micronutrient intake is inadequate following operation [3–5].
PRIMARY CARE PROVIDER CONSIDERATIONS BEFORE REFERRAL OF SURGICAL CANDIDATES Guidelines that have been proposed [3] for adolescent bariatric surgery necessarily take into consideration the natural history of pediatric severe obesity and the National Institutes of Health consensus guidelines for performing bariatric surgery in adults. Mortality for obese adults begins to rise fairly abruptly above a BMI of 30 to 35 kg/m2 [2] for both men and women. Although adolescents may ultimately suffer the same or greater mortality risk from extreme obesity, it is 223
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BMI ≥ 40 No Continue behavioral approaches
BMI ≥ 50 Yes
No
Yes No Severe or less severe comorbidity*?
Severe comorbidity*?
No
Yes
Continue behavioral approaches
Yes
Favorable surgical candidate?** • • • • • •
*See Table 18.1 **See Table 18.2 ***See Table 18.3
• •
≥ 6 mo. of failed non-surgical weight management attempts Motivated patient without coercion Realistic expectations Family commitment Generally compliant with regimens Capable of understanding risks and lifelong dietary consequences of surgery Agrees to long-term follow-up Decisional capacity is present
Yes Consider referral to qualified*** bariatric program
FIGURE 18.1 Adolescent bariatric management algorithm.
generally held that most teenagers will not suffer a lethal complication of obesity before adulthood. To date, there is no empiric evidence to indicate that different indications for bariatric operation should be used for adolescents compared with adults, though it is rational to be more conservative with adolescents because less is known about the long-term risks and durability of the surgery in youth. A practical algorithm that can be used to guide initial surgical referral decisions for a clinically severely obese adolescent is shown in Figure 18.1. For adolescents with comorbidities of obesity who have been unsuccessful at attaining a healthier weight during 6 months or more of conventional
TABLE 18.1 Comorbidities of Obesity Examples of Severe Comorbidities Type 2 diabetes mellitus Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome Pseudotumor cerebri Examples of Less Severe Comorbidities Impaired glucose tolerance Hyperlipidemia Hypertension Venous stasis disease Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease Polycystic ovary syndrome Psychosocial pathology (depression, withdrawal) Significant impairment in activities of daily living Gastroesophageal reflux
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TABLE 18.2 Contraindications for Bariatric Surgery Adolescent or family not able to comprehend risks and benefits of the intervention Adolescent not autonomously motivated to consider operation Adolescent has unrealistic expectations for results of the surgical intervention Family/adolescent not able to commit to compliance with postoperative nutritional recommendations and long-term medical and nutritional monitoring History of noncompliance with treatment regimens or planned health care provider visits Presence of a medically correctable cause of obesity Existence of a medical, psychiatric, or cognitive condition that may impair the ability of patient to assent to surgery or adhere to postoperative dietary and medication regimen Inadequately documented weight loss attempts Existence of substance abuse in preceding year Current lactation, pregnancy, or plans for pregnancy in upcoming 2 years Patient lacks decisional capacity Inability to provide informed assent (patient) and consent (family) Adolescent has not attained skeletal maturity (expected adult stature)
dietary and physical activity measures, bariatric surgery may be an option (Table 18.1). It is difficult to precisely define the concept of “failure” of conventional weight management attempts, and failure must be defined on an individual basis, in the context of the weight-management resources that are locally available for the adolescent. Because the number of dedicated adolescent weightmanagement programs is limited, this approach may be unavailable to the majority of individuals in need of services. The decision to pursue intensive therapies such as surgery necessarily must be made with the agreement of the primary care provider that all reasonable and available nonsurgical weight management attempts have been exhausted. Finally, there are a number of factors that should represent contraindications to pursuit of surgical therapy (Table 18.2). Adolescents being considered for bariatric surgery should be referred to specialized centers of excellence with a multidisciplinary bariatric team capable of evaluating and managing medical comorbidities of obesity, providing long-term follow-up, and managing the unique challenges posed by the severely obese adolescent (see Table 18.3). Guidelines have been established by the National Institutes of Health [6], the American Society for Bariatric Surgery (http://www.asbs.org) [7], the American College of Surgeons, and the Surgical Review Corporation (http://www.surgicalreview.org) that indicate that such teams should include specialists with expertise in obesity evaluation and management, psychology, nutrition, physical activity, and bariatric surgery. Depending on the individual needs of the adolescent patient, additional expertise in adolescent medicine, endocrinology, pulmonology, gastroenterology, cardiology, orthopedics, and ethics should be readily available. At present, specialized adolescent bariatric programs are being established at a number of academic medical centers in the United States. The timing for surgical treatment for adolescents is controversial and depends, in most cases, on the compelling health needs of the patient. However, there are certain physiological factors that need to be considered in planning an essentially elective operation. Physiologic maturation is generally complete by sexual maturation (Tanner) stage 3 or 4 [8]. Skeletal maturation (adult stature) is normally attained by the age of 13 to 14 years in girls [9] and 15 to 16 years in boys [10]. Overweight children generally experience accelerated onset of puberty. As a result, they are likely to be taller and have advanced bone age compared with age-matched nonoverweight children. If there is uncertainty about whether adult stature has been attained, skeletal maturation (bone age) can be objectively assessed with a radiograph of the hand and wrist [11]. If an individual has attained 95% or more of adult stature [12], there should be little concern that a bariatric procedure would significantly impair completion of linear growth.
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TABLE 18.3 Suggested Institution and Program Qualifications 1. The program has support for excellence in the care of adolescent bariatric surgical patients at the highest level of administration. 2. The bariatric surgeon meets training criteria recommended by the American Society for Bariatric Surgery (http://www.asbs.org). 3. The bariatric program maintains a “medical director” with expertise in pediatrics who participates in the decisionmaking process leading to surgery. 4. The program is staffed with a qualified and specially trained allied health worker (e.g., physician’s assistant or advanced practice nurse) to act as a bariatric patient care coordinator. This individual’s role is dedicated to the close monitoring and continuing education needed in the postoperative care of adolescent bariatric patients. 5. The program maintains a psychologist with expertise in bariatric patient evaluation. 6. The program maintains a dedicated dietician with subspecialty experience or training in bariatric nutritional care. 7. The program maintains a full complement of the various consultative services required for the care of morbidly obese surgical patients including the immediate availability of in-house critical care services. 8. The institution maintains a full line of medical equipment and instruments for the care of bariatric patients throughout the hospital environment (including the clinic area, operating room, intensive care unit, emergency room, and radiologic facilities) suitable for the size and weights seen with extremely obese patients. a. The hospital beds, gurneys, operating room tables, clinic exam room and waiting room furniture, scales, wheel chairs, and commodes need to be strong enough and extra wide to accommodate the extremely obese patient and family members. b. Patient movement/transfer systems for morbidly obese patients must be in place wherever the morbidly obese receive care. c. The computed tomography scanner, fluoroscopy tables, and nuclear medicine equipment must have sufficient capacity to handle morbidly obese patients. 9. The program has a bariatric surgeon who spends a significant portion of his or her efforts in the field of bariatric surgery, who achieves annual continuing medical education in bariatrics, and who has qualified coverage and support for patient care during times of his absence. 10. The program uses clinical pathway orders that facilitate the standardization of perioperative care. 11. The hospital should have a subset of nurses who routinely care for bariatric patients and receive regular bariatric inservice education. 12. The program provides long-term medical follow-up of all patients undergoing bariatric procedures with a monitoring and tracking system for outcomes assessment.
COMPREHENSIVE TEAM ASSESSMENT OF THE PATIENT REFERRED FOR BARIATRIC SURGERY Optimal bariatric management (preoperative patient selection and postoperative monitoring) of the adolescent is provided by a team consisting of a pediatrician with weight-management expertise, a psychologist with adolescent expertise, a qualified bariatric surgeon with a special focus in adolescent bariatric practice, a dietician with special focus in bariatric nutrition, and an advanced practice nurse dedicated to care coordination for this special-needs patient group. Comprehensive assessment of potential bariatric patients by the team begins with a thorough review of the patient’s past medical and behavioral history and history of weight-loss attempts provided by the primary care physician. Objective testing, which should be considered during evaluation for bariatric surgery, is shown in Table 18.4. These preliminary studies may indicate the need for consultation by a cardiologist, pulmonologist, endocrinologist, or other specialists. The history will often raise psychosocial concerns that the psychologist will need to be prepared to address. The psychologist is an integral member of the adolescent bariatric team. The psychologist not only provides considerable input into selection of patients appropriate for surgery but also provides ongoing consultation and management of adherence and psychological issues postsurgery. The
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TABLE 18.4 Preoperative Assessment System Endocrine Hepatobiliary/ Nutritional Cardiovascular Hematologic Pulmonary Skeletal Anthropometrics
Measure Fasting glucose and insulin, hemoglobin A1C, and glucose tolerance testing if indicated by abnormal fasting glucose; thyroid function testing; pregnancy test for females Liver function tests, albumin, consider ultrasound of gallbladder (if symptoms indicative of cholelithiasis) Lipid profile, consider transthoracic echocardiogram Complete blood count Consider polysomnogram for patients with symptoms of obstructive sleep apnea Bone age assessment should be considered for those patients for whom doubt exists regarding whether adult stature has been obtained Height, weight, waist and hip circumferences, and bioelectrical impedance (or DEXA if <300 pounds)
DEXA = dual-energy x-ray densitometry.
TABLE 18.5 Goals of Psychological Evaluation Determine the level of cognitive and psychosocial development, primarily to judge the extent to which the adolescent is capable of participating in the decision to proceed with the intervention Expose emotional or behavioral problems that may bear on postoperative compliance with nutritional requirements Identify past/present psychiatric or eating disorders Define potential supports and barriers to regimen adherence, as well as family readiness for surgery and the required lifestyle changes (particularly if one or both parents are obese) Assess whether there are reasonable outcome expectations Assess family unit stability and identify psychological stressors or conflicts within the family Determine whether the adolescent is autonomously motivated to consider bariatric surgery or whether any element of coercion is present
preoperative psychological evaluation of the prospective adolescent bariatric patient differs considerably from the evaluation of adult candidates. Goals of the evaluation are provided in Table 18.5. Briefly stated, prospective patients are screened for psychopathology, including binge-eating symptoms, as well as cognitive and emotional maturity, history of adherence to medical regimens, and family support. This evaluation is conducted in part with the patient and family together, as well as with the adolescent patient alone. Such a comprehensive family-centered psychosocial assessment provides the bariatric team with the information needed to make decisions about the appropriateness of surgical intervention for each adolescent and to tailor the management to improve adherence with nutritional regimens. Once the bariatric team’s evaluation is complete, decision making regarding a patient’s candidacy for surgery must take into account all information obtained. Further input from other involved caregivers (particularly the referring pediatrician) can be important for gauging an adolescent’s autonomous motivation for surgery and the patient’s prior history of compliance with prescribed regimens and office visits. The multidisciplinary team considering patients for adolescent bariatric surgery acts much like a tumor board or organ transplant team, discussing the advantages and disadvantages of a complex surgical intervention and weighing the myriad psychological, developmental, medical, and social/family factors that may well effect an individual’s chances of success with the intervention.
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Once the decision has been made to proceed with bariatric surgery, adequate preoperative education of the patient and family is critical. The dietician plays a necessary role, counseling the patient and family about the appropriate postoperative nutritional regimen. Preoperatively, the progression of acceptable food items, emphasis on high-protein foods, appropriate consistency, and meal volumes prescribed during the first week, first month, and subsequent months are discussed to prepare the patient and family for the drastic dietary change. Having the patient and the primary caregivers participate in a “taste-testing” exercise to concretely experience the various high-protein drink products allowed during the first weeks after surgery can help to improve adherence to the advised dietary regimen. The high-protein drinks tasted are ranked according to the patient’s preference. Commercially available products and those made from recipes, which allow the patient to design high-protein drinks with flavors of his or her choosing, provide the patient with many options. This feature of the preoperative education was developed to encourage patients to take an active role in their postoperative diet, increase awareness about their food preferences, and help families plan in advance for obtaining the selected food items that will be most acceptable to the patients. The dietician, along with the advanced practice nurse and surgeons then review required postoperative medication and micronutrient supplementation regimens. Complications and expected side effects specific to the operation are discussed in great detail, and written testing is used to document the patient’s mastery of the information presented. Thorough and repeated education of the family and the patient is of paramount importance for adequate preoperative preparation. Most believe that the more informed the patient and the family are, the lower the likelihood of preventable complications.
POSTOPERATIVE MANAGEMENT The most common procedure currently used for adolescents is roux-en-Y gastric bypass, although the adjustable gastric band may be a satisfactory option pending approval for this age group by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Malabsorptive procedures such as biliopancreatic bypass with or without duodenal switch are currently performed in adults but are probably not suitable for most adolescents. Following surgery, patients are typically cared for in a monitored, nonintensive care unit setting, and maintenance fluids are administered based on lean body weight (typically 40 to 50% of actual weight). Early warning signs of complication include fever, tachycardia, tachypnea, increasing oxygen requirement, oliguria, hiccoughs, regurgitation, worsening abdominal pain, a feeling of anxiety, or acute alteration in mental status. These signs warrant immediate attention and appropriate investigation as they may foreshadow a gastrointestinal leak, pulmonary embolus, bowel obstruction, or afferent loop syndrome (acute dilation and resultant rupture of the bypassed gastric remnant). Routinely, a water-soluble upper gastrointestinal (UGI) contrast study is obtained on postoperative day 1. Special radiologic considerations for adolescent patients undergoing bariatric surgery are outlined elsewhere [13]. After satisfactory passage of contrast is documented, patients are begun on clear liquids and subsequently advanced to a highprotein liquid diet for the first month after surgery. Postoperative medical surveillance after adolescent bariatric surgery is intensive — weekly for 1 month, then monthly for 6 months, then every third month for the next 18 months. For local patients, this monitoring is best provided by the bariatric program, whereas for distance patients, this care and monitoring is shared with the local pediatrician on an alternate visit basis. Dietary advancement after surgery is a stepwise process of introducing new items of gradually increasing complexity toward the goal of a well-balanced, small-portion diet, which ensures a daily intake of one-half to 1 g protein per kilogram of ideal weight. This goal is based on the desire to lose fat mass while preserving lean mass postoperatively — a goal that is achievable in our experience [14]. The recommended stages of the dietary protocol for the adolescent patient are presented in Table 18.6. Though general guidelines are given for the timing of each stage, the progression through each of these stages is individualized and dependent on the patient’s rate of recovery from the surgery, initial weight status, and tolerance of foods being introduced. To
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TABLE 18.6 Postoperative Dietary Protocol Dietary Stage
Form
1 2
Liquids Liquids
3
Liquids
3A
Liquids + solids
3B
Liquids + solids
3C
Liquids + solids Liquids + solids
4
5
Liquids + solids
6
Liquids + solids
Description Water and ice chips: duration: 1–2 days; fluid goals:1–2 oz per hour Sugar-free clear liquids; duration: up to 1 week; fluid goals: 4–6 oz per hour; total: 48–64 oz per day High-protein drinks, protein-supplemented pudding, or yogurt; meal pattern: consumed three to four times per day; fluid goal: 90 oz per day; duration: about 3–4 weeks; volume: one-half to two-thirds of a cup per meal; goals/day: protein: 50–60 g, calories: 500–600 kcal Semisolid high-protein foods (e.g., baked fish, tuna salad, chicken salad, cottage cheese, low-fat cheese, shaved turkey, scrambled eggs, egg salad, skim milk); consistency: foods are blenderized, pureed, or chopped into pieces no larger than the size of a pea before eating, and fat-free broth, fat-free mayonnaise, or plain yogurt is added to help moisten foods, as needed, for easier digestion; duration: 2–3 weeks; volume: one-half to two-thirds of a cup per meal; goals/day: protein: 50–60 m, calories: 500–600 kcal Introduction of complex carbohydrate foods (note: foods listed below are added to the meals consisting of a semisolid high-protein food): part I: protein-supplemented blended soups, potato, hot cereal; part II: crackers, toast; goals/day: protein: 50–75 g, calories: 500–600 kcal Introduction of other carbohydrate foods (e.g. vegetables, fruits, low-sugar cold cereal, rice, pasta); new foods: try one-quarter cup per meal, introduce one new food every 2–3 days Follow acceptable food choices from stages 3A, 3B, and 3C: goals/day: protein: 75–100 g, calories: 600–800 kcal, volume: less than or equal to 1 cup per meal; starts approximately 3 months postsurgery Follow acceptable food choices from stages 3A, 3B, 3C, and 4: new foods: red meat, pork, grapes, and raisins; goals/day: protein, 75–100 g, calories: 800–1000 kcal/day, volume: less than or equal to 1 cup/meal; starts approximately: 6 months postsurgery Starts approximately 12 months postsurgery; goals/day: protein: 75–100 g, calories: 1000–1200 kcal/day (may vary according to level of physical activity), volume: less than or equal to 1.5 cups per meal; will continue to avoid foods high in fat and sugar; duration: for life
determine whether there are any associated adverse reactions to new foods consumed, the foods are introduced individually over a 2- to 3-day period. The risk of adverse reactions to liquid and solid food items will be minimized if foods high in fat or sugar are avoided and if food volumes are minimized initially. Consumption of sweets or high-fat foods and overeating can result in the dumping syndrome. “Dumping” occurs because after gastric bypass, the gastric phase of digestion is essentially eliminated, and consumed items very quickly pass from the new gastric pouch into the small intestine. This syndrome is associated with abdominal cramping, sweating, a rapid heart rate, vomiting, and diarrhea. To avoid association of such adverse reactions to food items, education must be provided that will encourage use of product nutrition labels to aid in food and drink selection. It is also critical that patients and families learn to identify sources of “hidden” fats (e.g., prepared food from restaurants) and sugars (e.g., condiments such as ketchup) that can cause adverse reactions and ultimately limit the success of the weight-loss operation. During the first several months following gastric bypass, it is not uncommon to observe caloric intakes in the 300 to 500 kcal/day range. Given the extremely limited intake of solid food (and hence the limited intake of the water content of most solid foods), patients must focus on intake of 90+ ounces of water or nonnutritive liquids per day to avoid dehydration. To ensure that fluid intake does not compromise the patient’s capacity to consume necessary solid foods, no liquids are consumed during the half hour before or after a meal or during meals.
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Nonsteroidal antiinflammatory medications should be avoided to reduce the risk of intestinal ulceration and bleeding. Ursodiol and ranitidine are prescribed for 6 months, as is the practice for most adult bariatric programs, to reduce the risk of gallstone development and gastrointestinal ulceration. Alcohol should be avoided after gastric bypass, owing to the reduced threshold for intoxication and adverse effects on the function of liver already compromised with steatosis or steatohepatitis [15]. Postoperative vitamin and mineral supplementation consists of two pediatric chewable multivitamins and a calcium supplement, plus an iron supplement for menstruating females. Strong consideration should also be given to additional supplementation of B-complex vitamins beyond what is contained in multivitamin preparations to augment thiamine and folate supplementation because of the risk of beriberi [5] and the possibility of pregnancy in the postoperative period. It is strongly recommended that pregnancy be avoided for the initial 2-year postoperative period, as this is the period of most rapid weight loss. Contraception should be well thought out and deliberate to avoid potential nutritional problems for mother and fetus. We routinely reemphasize five basic “rules” with each patient encounter: eat protein first, drink 64 to 96 ounces of water or sugar-free liquids daily, no snacking between meals, exercise at least 30 minutes per day, and always remember vitamins and minerals. Behavioral strategies, such as goal setting, self-monitoring, and incentives, can help ensure compliance to the postoperative protocol. Written contracts are used to specify nutrition and physical activity goals and the level of family support that is developmentally appropriate. Daily tracking of the type and amount of food and drink consumed and of vitamin and mineral supplements taken helps patients’ dietary regimen adherence. In some cases, incentives can be a useful behavioral tool to help keep adolescents motivated to maintain their new eating habits and to reach increasing activity goals. Available and achievable incentives are selected by the patient and provided by the family and are earned when contracted goals are met over a set period of time.
FINAL WORDS OF CAUTION These postoperative guidelines necessitate significant lifestyle changes on the part of the adolescent. It is noteworthy that these changes must occur for a severely obese adolescent who has demonstrated failure at maintaining similar dietary and physical activity changes in the past. Nonadherence to medical regimens is typically worse in the adolescent patient, with medication nonadherence rates of 55% being reported for long-term regimens [16]. Furthermore, these lifestyle changes must occur within an environment that has contributed to the development of the critical weight and health status of the adolescent. Thus, these postoperative nutritional demands need to be considered within the context of a family environment, the parent–adolescent relationship, and other significant interpersonal relationships (peers, siblings) if they are to be successful. Finally, adolescence is a period of rapid change in emotional, cognitive, interpersonal, social, and career/vocational development. The fluidity of this developmental period may present unique challenges for the adolescent bariatric surgery patients that are not seen in the adult patient. All of these factors contribute to the need for caution and closer postoperative monitoring of the adolescent than is seen in adults. Given that bariatric surgery for the severely obese adolescent patient has not been extensively studied, data describing predictors of positive surgical outcomes are nonexistent. Thus, the development of this area of research is of critical importance to understand the implications of this treatment for long-term psychosocial and physical health. The largest published study in the literature reported 33 adolescents who underwent various forms of gastric restriction and bypass between 1981 and 2001 [17]. Although significant weight reduction and health improvement were seen overall, five patients regained some or all of their body weight 5 to 10 years after surgery. The sole study that has looked at adolescent adherence to the postoperative bariatric regimen indicated that incomplete adherence to dietary, vitamin supplementation, and physical activity recommendations may be as high as 80 to 90% for adolescents [18]. These findings indicate variable adherence patterns following gastric bypass in adolescents that may affect clinically important outcomes.
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SUMMARY The obesity epidemic in this country has generated a population of adolescents with the premature onset of adult disease. It is clear that bariatric surgery can result in significant weight loss. However, it is not yet clear whether weight loss or comorbidity resolution after adolescent bariatric surgery is sustainable over a lifetime or will have unintended negative consequences. At present, we can only apply rational principles of adolescent medicine and psychology, as well as evidence from adult bariatric surgical studies to guide the application of these procedures to a group of young patients who have serious medical and psychological comorbidities of obesity. Adolescent bariatric surgery programs should have expertise that enables them to assess and meet the unique medical, cognitive, physiological, and psychosocial needs of the adolescent and should be modeled after those adult bariatric programs demonstrating best practices. In the absence of scientifically valid evidence documenting long-term outcomes of bariatric surgery in adolescents, criteria for surgery should be conservative; the surgery should be performed in centers committed to clinical research and capable of long-term, detailed follow-up and outcomes assessment.
REFERENCES 1. Hubbard, V. S. and W. H. Hall. Gastrointestinal surgery for severe obesity. Obes. Surg., 1991, pp. 257–265. 2. Calle, E. E., M. J. Thun, J. M. Petrelli, C. Rodriguez, and C. W. Heath, Jr. Body-mass index and mortality in a prospective cohort of U.S. adults. N Engl J Med, 1999, pp. 1097–1105. 3. Inge, T. H., N. F. Krebs, V. F. Garcia, J. A. Skelton, K. S. Guice, R. S. Strauss et al. Bariatric surgery for severely overweight adolescents: Concerns and recommendations. Pediatrics, 2004, pp. 217–223. 4. Garcia, V. F., L. Langford, and T. H. Inge. Application of laparoscopy for bariatric surgery in adolescents. Curr. Opin. Pediat., 2003, pp. 248–255. 5. Towbin, A., T. H. Inge, V. F. Garcia, H. R. Roerig, R. H. Clements, C. M. Harmon, and S. R. Daniels. Beriberi after gastric bypass surgery in adolescence. J. Pediat., 2004, pp. 263–267. 6. Gastrointestinal surgery for severe obesity: National Institutes of Health Consensus Development Conference Statement. Am. J. Clin. Nutr., 1992, pp. 615S–619S. 7. American Society for Bariatric Surgery. Society of American Gastrointestinal Endoscopic Surgeons. Guidelines for laparoscopic and open surgical treatment of morbid obesity. Obes. Surg., 2000, pp. 378–379. 8. Tanner, J. M. Growth at Adolescence. Oxford: Blackwell Scientific Publications, 1962. 9. Marshall, W. A. and J. M. Tanner. Variations in pattern of pubertal changes in girls. Arch. Dis. Child., 1969, pp. 291–303. 10. Marshall, W. A. and J. M. Tanner. Variations in the pattern of pubertal changes in boys. Arch. Dis. Child., 1970, pp. 13–23. 11. Greulich, W. and S. I. Pyle. Radiographic Atlas of Skeletal Development of the Hand and Wrist. Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press, 1983. 12. Tanner, J. M. Assessment of Skeletal Maturity and Prediction of Adult Height (TW2 method). San Diego: Academic Press, 1983. 13. Inge, T. H., L. F. Donnelly, M. Vierra, A. Cohen, S. R. Daniels, and V. F. Garcia. Managing bariatric patients in a children’s hospital: radiologic considerations and limitations. J. Ped. Surg., 2004. 14. Inge, T. H., M. L. Lawson, V. F. Garcia, S. Kirk, and S. Daniels. Body composition changes after gastric bypass in morbidly obese adolescents. Obes. Res., 2004, p. A53. 15. Xanthakos, S. M., L. Bucuvalas, J. Daniels, S. Garcia, V. and T. Inge. Histologic spectrum of NASH in morbidly obese adolescents differs from adults. Obes. Res., 2004, p. A211. 16. Rapoff, M. A. Adherence to Pediatric Medical Regimens. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1999. 17. Sugerman, H. J., E. L. Sugerman, E. J. DeMaria, J. M. Kellum, C. Kennedy, Y. Mowery, and L. G. Wolfe. Bariatric surgery for severely obese adolescents. J. Gastrointest. Surg., 2003, pp. 102–108. 18. Rand, C. S. and A. M. Macgregor. Adolescents having obesity surgery: a 6-year follow-up. South. Med. J., 1994, pp. 1208–1213.
Section 11 Interdisciplinary, Interactive, Group Instruction
Interactive 19 Interdisciplinary, Group Instruction: Orientation, Evaluation and Monitoring Progress Lauren Keely Carlisle and Stewart T. Gordon CONTENTS Introduction ....................................................................................................................................235 Program Overview................................................................................................................235 Family Intervention ..............................................................................................................236 Four-Level Progression ........................................................................................................236 Level I (Red) ............................................................................................................236 Level II (Yellow) ......................................................................................................236 Level III (Green) ......................................................................................................236 Level IV (Blue) ........................................................................................................236 Orientation......................................................................................................................................237 Evaluation.......................................................................................................................................237 Monitoring Progress.......................................................................................................................238 Sample Activity Descriptions...............................................................................................239 Group Behavior — Goal Setting .............................................................................239 Group Exercise — Aerobic Field Sports .................................................................239 Group Nutrition — Portion Control ........................................................................240 Procedures for Absentees .........................................................................................240 Summary ........................................................................................................................................240 References ......................................................................................................................................240
INTRODUCTION PROGRAM OVERVIEW The Interdisciplinary, Interactive Pediatric Weight-Management Program is a comprehensive program designed especially for the needs of the overweight child aged 7 to 17 years. The staff is a team of medical, health, and nutrition professionals whose primary concern is the safety and success of the child in the program. A pediatrician or family physician serves as the medical director for the program. He or she provides overall medical supervision and guidance. In severely overweight children, calorie restriction is recommended. The very low calorie diet called the protein-modified fast (PMF) is described in detail in Appendix A3. The PMF diet must be closely supervised by a pediatrician or family physician. Health assessments are given quarterly, and results are discussed with parents and mailed to referring family physicians or pediatricians. 235
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A registered dietitian provides nutrition supervision and guidance for the program. He or she conducts weekly educational sessions on nutrition topics and instructs patients in the proper administration of the prescribed diet. Nutrition sessions are conducted in group settings with patients, parents, siblings, and extended family and friends in attendance. A child development or behavior specialist provides instruction in behavior-modification skills and techniques for the program. He or she conducts weekly educational sessions on the psychosocial aspects of obesity in children. Behavior modification skills are introduced using discussion, modeling, role playing, and guided problem solving. Topics such as self-monitoring, commitment, limit setting, habit formation, goal setting and action plans, decision-making skills, attitudes, and assertiveness training are discussed. An exercise physiologist provides the exercise supervision and guidance for the program. He or she conducts weekly exercise sessions on various health and fitness topics and leads a weekly exercise class. Each session is a mixture of sharing information on topics such as heart-rate monitoring and injury prevention as well as the actual exercise. In addition, fitness counseling includes motivational techniques to increase daily activity levels and improve body movement awareness based on social cognitive theory [1].
FAMILY INTERVENTION Because successful behavior modification depends on what happens in the home, the Pediatric Weight-Management Program makes parents an integral part of the weekly intervention. We have found that the child’s successes are determined not only by the child’s commitment but also by that of his or her parents as well. At least one parent is required, and siblings and extended family are encouraged to attend the weekly sessions with the overweight child. The parent’s participation in the interactive nutrition, behavior, and exercise instruction is strongly promoted.
FOUR-LEVEL PROGRESSION The needs of the overweight child depend on his or her level of overweight. There are four distinct levels of the Pediatric Weight-Management Program, each developed specifically for the individual needs of each level of obesity. Level I (Red) This is an inpatient or outpatient level that serves the needs of the child with severe obesity or special medical indications. Level II (Yellow) This level is for children who are diagnosed as overweight. Weekly outpatient sessions address issues of diet, behavior, and fitness. Level III (Green) This level is for the child who is at risk for developing an overweight condition. Weekly outpatient sessions are designed to arrest and reverse the onset of obesity through nutrition education, increased physical activity, exercise training, and behavior modification. Level IV (Blue) This is the maintenance program. Weekly exercise sessions and monthly multitopic meetings reinforce the healthy habits learned in intervention levels I, II, and III. The goal is for a lifetime of healthy eating and activity. This program may also serve as an obesity prevention program for healthy-weight children with primary risk factors.
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ORIENTATION The following discussion will be delivered by the Medical or Program Director during the first orientation meeting. A parent handout is located in Appendix A1.11. The founders of the Interdisciplinary, Interactive Pediatric Weight-Management Program are primarily concerned with the prevention and treatment of pediatric obesity. We believe that individualized treatment accompanied by long-term educational follow-up is the most effective approach to this goal. In our clinics, the intervention is closely supervised and the child receives uncompromising care of the highest quality from the pediatric, behavior, exercise, and nutrition specialists. We use a tailored approach in a group setting. The immediate goal is the improvement of the child’s physical and emotional well-being. Weight loss and weight maintenance are the attractive side-effects of the overall lifestyle focus of the program. Overweight children are often labeled by their classmates and even family members as lazy, fat, or stupid, which can lead to a significant erosion of confidence and to depression. By providing a support group structure for overweight children, the Pediatric Weight-Management Program helps to rebuild self-esteem and self-confidence. The children are powerfully motivated by seeing their peers face and overcome similar problems. Almost every child who completes the Pediatric WeightManagement Program enjoys a measurable increase in self-esteem. The program aims to educate children and their families in lifelong healthy behaviors and skills they need to prevent mild overweight from becoming obesity and to maintain healthy weight once achieved. Our long-term program is a family resource for support and reinforcement of the education provided during the treatment intervention. We believe the success of the Pediatric Weight-Management Program is a result of the “A” Factors: 1. Availability of highly committed program professionals: We are deeply concerned with the child’s progress, health, and overall emotional well-being. 2. Accountability of the child to the program staff: Each week the parents and children report their progress to the staff and are responsible for compliance with the program guidelines. Written records of weight, exercise, and diet are examined by the staff every week, which we believe increases program compliance and success. 3. Attention of only the positive kind: When the child does well, she or he receives strong positive reinforcement from the program staff. If the child does not do well, he or she receives encouragement to try harder the next week, but attention is quickly focused to another area of the program.
EVALUATION The objective of the medical component of the pediatric weight management program is to ensure that the intervention is safe and effective. This is determined by evaluating the program’s effect on physiologic, metabolic, biochemical, and psychosocial parameters. We have shown in several clinical observations that the program promotes enhanced physical fitness [2,3], increased physical activity levels [4], decreased total body weight [5–8], decreased body mass index [2,5,8], decreased body adiposity [5,7,9,10], maintenance of lean body mass [10], maintenance of resting energy expenditure [11], improved lipid profiles [12,13], maintenance of biochemical status [5,14,15], and improved psychosocial parameters [15]. Physical fitness and activity are evaluated by determining heart rate during daily activity, selfreported physical activity (the Godin Leisure Time Exercise Questionnaire and the self-administered physical activity checklist), maximal oxygen uptake (VO2 max), levels of muscular strength and endurance, and levels of flexibility. Weight status and body composition are evaluated by measuring weight, height, body mass index and percentile, waist and hip circumference, dual-energy x-ray
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absorptiometry, skinfolds measurement, or bioelectrical impedance analysis. Resting energy expenditure may be evaluated by indirect calorimetry. Cardiovascular risk factors are assessed by blood pressure and resting heart rate and blood chemistry (CBC w/diff and CHEM 20 including total cholesterol, triglycerides, and high and low-density lipoprotein). Psychosocial parameters are assessed by the following questionnaires: Piers-Harris Children’s Self-Concept Scale, Childhood Depression Inventory, Olsen FACES III test, Culture-Free SEI Form B, Achenbach Child Behavior Checklist (ages 4 to 18), Children’s Attributional Style Questionnaire, Student Behavior Checklist, and Family Dynamic Assessment. Maturation is assessed by Tanner staging. Detailed protocols of these measures are found in Appendix A2, and clinical procedures for conducting testing are detailed in Chapter 2 by Sothern.
MONITORING PROGRESS Participants are assigned to groups I, II, or III on the basis of their initial body mass index percentile (Appendix A1.10). This level is also used to determine a recommended term of treatment. Children in level 1 are encouraged to attend the program for 1 to 2 years. Those in level II should participate in the program for at least 1 year, and children in level III are given a 6- to 12-month term of treatment. During the first few months of the program, children and adolescents attend weekly 2-hour comprehensive sessions (Table 19.1). During the medical monitoring period, students who are waiting can be directed to an outdoor park area that includes stationary park equipment and outdoor game supplies such as jump ropes, balls, and hula hoops. This will provide an additional opportunity for the families to engage in physical activity. An indoor nutrition/fitness activity center may also be set up with nutrition books, puzzles, games, and indoor physical activity supplies such as jump ropes, soft balls, mats, music, and videos, in case of inclement weather. This center will also serve as a demonstration area to encourage parents to create environments for play inside and outside of their own homes. Parents are instructed to supervise the children in the center during the free-play sessions. Weekly sessions begin with a weigh-in and medical monitoring period. This is followed by a group discussion highlighting the patients’ accomplishments for the week (Table 19.1). Positive reinforcement is given for trying new vegetables, turning down high-calorie snacks, or participating in physical activity. Behavior modification skills are introduced using discussion, modeling, role playing, and guided problem solving. Topics such as self-monitoring, commitment, limit setting, habit formation, goal setting and action plans, decision-making skills, attitudes, relapse prevention, and assertiveness training are discussed (Table 19.2). Patients with psychological problems are referred to a therapist for additional individual counseling while continuing in the program. Award certificates, inexpensive sports equipment, and other incentive items are given quarterly as positive reinforcement for achieving short-term goals. Special events such as roller-skating parties, park/field days, and holiday parties are organized during the 1-year program to encourage continued participation. At the beginning of the program, the participants receive books [16], color-coded goal-setting forms, and self-monitoring records specific to their level of overweight. The color-coding of the forms and records is used as positive reinforcement as participants move from one weight level into another. The maintenance level (blue) will begin after a participant achieves his or her goal weight, which is determined quarterly after each evaluation by the dietician and the physician. Once the
TABLE 19.1 Sample Weekly Clinic Schedule Time,
PM
4:30–5:00 5:00–5:15 5:15–6:30
Activity Weigh-in and medical monitoring Group session — accomplishments Group activity sessions on nutrition, behavior, and exercise
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TABLE 19.2 Sample Weekly Intervention Schedule Week
Topic
Activity Description
1
Nutrition Behavior Exercise Nutrition Behavior Exercise
Diet instruction Goal-setting and self-monitoring Safety and exercise/MPEP step Questions and answers Commitment rating Metabolic systems of the body: aerobic versus anaerobic metabolism — low-impact aerobics to music Fun in the kitchen — oven-fried chicken Benefits and sacrifices: limit setting and rules for eating Aerobic field sports Fun in the kitchen — low-calorie pizza Habit formation: ABC’s of behavior; behavior chain The MPEP pump — strength training Portion control Individual sessions Body composition — aerobic circuit Restaurant choices Eating patterns, practical solutions, goal check The flex test — stretch ’n flex series
2
3
4
5
6
Nutrition Behavior Exercise Nutrition Behavior Exercise Nutrition Behavior Exercise Nutrition Behavior Exercise
Time,
PM
5:00–6:00 6:00–6:20 6:20-6:30 5:00–5:15 5:15–5:30 5:30-6:30 5:00–5:30 5:30–5:50 5:50-6:30 5:00–5:30 5:30–6:00 6:00-6:30 5:00–5:30 5:30–6:00 6:00-6:30 5:00–5:30 5:30–6:00 6:00–6:30
MPEP = moderate intensity progressive exercise program.
goal weight is achieved, subjects are encouraged to continue to attend weekly 2-hour sessions for the remainder of their recommended term of treatment. The staff will continue to instruct participants concerning nutrition, behavior modification, and exercise (Table 19.2).
SAMPLE ACTIVITY DESCRIPTIONS Group Behavior — Goal Setting The behavior specialist will discuss with the participants how to set weekly, realistic behavior goals. The participants will be encouraged to record the goals in the program workbook so that the specialist can revisit the goals during the next weekly class. Goals will be set in nutrition and physical activity. For example, a nutrition goal may be to replace two unhealthy snack foods with new vegetables. An exercise goal may be to perform 10 stomach crunches three times during the week or to stretch while watching a favorite television program. Please refer to Chapter 20 and Appendix A3 for more examples of the weekly educational sessions. Group Exercise — Aerobic Field Sports Children will participate in outdoor field games such as softball, volleyball, and soccer. The rules will be altered to encourage movement at all times. For example, aerobic softball requires that all team members walk/run the bases when a run is scored and perform 10 jumping or side jacks when the batter gets a strike. During aerobic volleyball, upbeat dance music is played while the teams hit a beach ball. Whenever the ball hits the ground, the team members must dance for 10 counts in different moves, twist, skip, run in place, and so on while the ball is retrieved for the next serve. In aerobic soccer, there are no boundaries other than those for safety reasons. Therefore, the ball is always in play. Offense and defense players switch places every 10 minutes to enable all members
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to run up and down the field. Only 5 seconds is allowed to begin play after a goal is achieved. Teams are selected as follows: all children line up behind the instructor, who alternately assigns the children to one of two colors to designate the different teams (e.g., blue and red). This is very time efficient and discourages captains and elimination issues (e.g. being picked last for a team; see also Chapter 20 and Appendix A3). Group Nutrition — Portion Control The dietician will discuss the importance of portion control during a kitchen demonstration. Foods from different nutrient groups will be measured and evaluated for nutrient content, calorie level, and fat content. Parents will participate in the demonstration by measuring the foods (see also Chapter 12 and Appendix A3). Procedures for Absentees Absentees are handled in the following manner: After one absence, children should be telephoned and encouraged to come in the next week. After two absences, they should again be telephoned and reminded that they do not have to report their weight during the meeting. They will be encouraged to provide nutrition and physical activity accomplishments during the following meeting. It is very important at this point that the patient be handled in a positive manner when he or she returns. Instructors should refrain from giving negative attention to their re-gain or lack of compliancy. After three absences, the patient’s physician should be notified and encouraged to telephone the patient. Also, the staff behavioral specialist or psychologist should be notified. After four absences, the family should be scheduled for a group consultation with all of the members of the staff. After this meeting, if attendance does not improve, the patient should be asked to leave the program. A follow-up questionnaire should be completed before their departure that explains their reason for leaving. Every attempt should be made to avoid negative reinforcement of poor attendance or relapse. Words such as “cheating” or “fat” should not be used when interviewing patients. Exercise staff (instructors, interns, and assistants), nutrition staff (dietitians, interns, and assistants), and medical staff (nurses and physician) should confine questions and comments to exercise, nutrition, and medically related issues. Behavior issues should be addressed by the behavioral specialist or psychologist experienced in counseling families.
SUMMARY We feel the success of the Pediatric Weight-Management Program’s integrated, four-level approach is a result of several factors: the sessions are designed to entertain the children and promote initial success; the program features parent-training methods in short, interactive, educational sessions; in severely overweight children, the diet intervention results in noticeable weight loss that motivates the patient to continue; improved exercise tolerance resulting from the weight loss promotes increased physical activity; and the program team provides consistent feedback. The patients and their families receive results and updates every 3 months. Most important, the program is conducted in groups of families. The child/family group dynamics and peer modeling are primary components of the successful management of obesity in youth.
REFERENCES 1. Bandura, A. Social Foundations on Thought and Action: A Social Cognition Theory. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1986. 2. Sothern, M. S. Exercise as a modality in the treatment of childhood obesity. Pediatr Clin North Am. 48:995–1015, 2001.
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3. Sothern, M. S., M. Loftin, U. Blecker, and J. N. Udall, Jr. Impact of significant weight loss on maximal oxygen uptake in obese children and adolescents. J. Investig. Med. 48:411–416, 2000. 4. Reed, J., C. VanVrancken, M. Loftin, C. Singley, J. Udall, and M. Sothern. Self-reported increases in physical activity in obese youth after a 10 week specialized moderate intensity exercise program. Obes. Res. 9:101s, 2001. 5. Sothern, M., J. Udall, R. Suskind, A. Vargas, and U. Blecker. Weight loss and growth velocity in obese children after very low calorie diet, exercise and behavior modification. Acta Paediatr. 89:1036–1043, 2000. 6. Sothern, M. S., H. Schumacher, T. K. von Almen, L. K. Carlisle, and J. N. Udall. Committed to kids: an integrated, 4-level team approach to weight management in adolescents. J. Am. Diet. Assoc. 102:S81–S85, 2002. 7. Sothern, M. S., J. M. Loftin, J. N. Udall, R. M. Suskind, T. L. Ewing, S. C. Tang, and U. Blecker. Safety, feasibility, and efficacy of a resistance training program in preadolescent obese children. Am. J. Med. Sci. 319:370–375, 2000. 8. Sothern, M. S., S. Hunter, R. M. Suskind, R. Brown, J. N. Udall, Jr., and U. Blecker. Motivating the obese child to move: the role of structured exercise in pediatric weight management. South. Med. J. 92:577–584, 1999. 9. Sothern, M., J. Loftin, T. Ewing, S. Tang, R. Suskind, and U. Blecker. The inclusion of resistance exercise in a multi-disciplinary obesity treatment program for preadolescent children. South. Med J. 92:585–592, 1999. 10. Olivier, L., G. Pinsonat, M. Loftin, C. Van Vrancken, K. Carlisle, S. Gordon et al. The effect of significant weight loss on body composition by DEXA in obese youth. Int. J. Obes. 26:S194, 2002. 11. Sothern, M., M. Loftin, R. Suskind, and J. Udall. The impact of significant weight loss on resting energy expenditure in obese youth. J. Investig. Med. 47:222–226, 1999. 12. Sothern, M. S., B. Despinasse, R. Brown, R. M. Suskind, J. N. Udall Jr., and U. Blecker. Lipid profiles of obese children and adolescents before and after significant weight loss: differences according to sex. South. Med. J. 93:278–282, 2000. 13. Brown, R., M. Sothern, R. Suskind, J. Udall, and U. Blecker. Racial differences in the lipid profiles of obese children and adolescents before and after significant weight loss. Clin. Pediatr. (Phila). 39:427–431, 2000. 14. Suskind, R., U. Blecker, J. Udall, T. von Almen, H. Schumacher, L. Carlisle, and M. Sothern. Recent advances in the treatment of childhood obesity. Pediatr. Diabetes. 1:23–33, 2000. 15. von Almen, T.K., R. Figueroa-Colon, and R. Suskind. Psychological considerations in the treatment of childhood obesity. In: The Obese Child. L. R. Giorgi PL, Catassi C, Eds. Basel: Karger Press, 1991. 16. Sothern, M., T. K. von Almen, and H. Schumacher. Trim Kids: The Proven Plan That Has Helped Thousands of Children Achieve a Healthier Weight. New York: Harper Collins Publishers, 2001.
Interactive, 20 Interdisciplinary, Group Instruction T. Kristian von Almen, Melinda S. Sothern, and Heidi Schumacher CONTENTS Behavioral Therapy: Group Counseling Sessions, Follow-Up, and Relapse Prevention.............244 Introduction...........................................................................................................................244 Setting Limits.................................................................................................................................246 Self-Monitoring of Food and Activity...........................................................................................248 Cue Elimination .............................................................................................................................248 Stimulus Control ............................................................................................................................248 Goal Setting: Short-Term, Long-Term, and Weekly .....................................................................249 Goal Assessment ............................................................................................................................249 Behavioral Substitution or Replacement .......................................................................................249 Relapse Prevention.........................................................................................................................250 Applied Activities and Experiences...............................................................................................250 Family Physical Activity and Fitness Education Sessions............................................................251 Introduction...........................................................................................................................251 Pediatric Obesity and Exercise Performance ................................................................................251 Exercise Instruction in Interactive, Interdisciplinary Clinical Settings ........................................252 Cardiorespiratory Endurance or Aerobic Exercises.............................................................256 Muscular Strength and Endurance Exercises.......................................................................256 Muscular Flexibility Exercises.............................................................................................257 Summary...............................................................................................................................257 Lesson 1: Benefits of Exercise, Exercise Safety, Warming-Up, Exercise Prescription, and Increasing Your Daily Activity — The MPEP-Step ...................................................................257 Lesson 2: Exercise Intensity and Pacing Skills (Metabolic Systems), Cooling Down after Exercise........................................................................................................................................259 Lesson 3: Aerobic Exercise — Modified Field Sports, the Homework Rule ..............................259 Lesson 4: Muscular Strength and Endurance: MPEP Pump, Strength Training Circuit, Creating Indoor Play Areas .........................................................................................................260 Lesson 5: Family Field Sports — Aerobic Volleyball, Creating Outdoor Play Areas .................261 Lesson 6: Flexibility, Flex Test I, and Flex and Stretch Class .....................................................261 Lesson 7: Aerobic Exercise and Cardiopulmonary Endurance, Steady State — Monitoring Heart Rate and Aerobic Circuit...................................................................................................261 Lesson 8: Exercise Prescriptions: The Fit Kit Walking Program .................................................262 Lesson 9: Review Muscular Strength and Endurance: Pull Your Own Weight Series ................262 Lesson 10: Park Day — Outdoor Play..........................................................................................262 Nutrition Education Sessions.........................................................................................................262 Diet Instruction.....................................................................................................................263 Food Labs: Fruit and Vegetable Group................................................................................263 243
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Cooking Demonstrations: Fun in the Kitchen — Oven-Fried Chicken..............................264 Nutrition Games: Fast-Food Follies.....................................................................................264 Class Discussion: Understanding Fiber ...............................................................................265 Benefits of Fiber .......................................................................................................265 Adding Fiber to Your Diet .......................................................................................265 References ......................................................................................................................................266
BEHAVIORAL THERAPY: GROUP COUNSELING SESSIONS, FOLLOW-UP, AND RELAPSE PREVENTION INTRODUCTION Learning theorists such as Ivan Pavlov [1] Albert Bandura [2–4], and B. F. Skinner [5–8] have provided the foundation for the behavioral techniques and applied strategies used in weight loss programs for children and their families. In addition, developmental theorists such as Jean Piaget [9,10] have added substantially to our understanding of the cognitive capabilities of children and adolescents. Last, the transtheoretical approach, initially used in the treatment of smoking and alcohol cessation [11–14], has been adapted for use in a variety of health promotion settings [15–17]. The essence of these theories will be presented when appropriate; for a detailed description of the research and writing underlying these theories, please refer to the references cited. This chapter presents behavioral techniques or strategies, adapted for the treatment of childhood obesity, which are used by health care professionals to help children and families achieve healthier lifestyle habits. The appendices contain many of the behavior-oriented tools developed for the Committed to Kids Weight Loss Program [18–21] at the Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center over the last 20 years. The Popular Press book, Trim Kids [21], written for parents of overweight children, provides a discussion of these behavioral strategies and contains related forms. Trim Kids is currently used by a variety of healthcare professionals and programs treating childhood overweight and obesity. Twenty years of researching and treating overweight children, teens, and families highlights the ambivalence and reluctance of this population to seek treatment. Many patients are also nervous to join or share themselves in a group setting. As such, an important issue in treating childhood obesity relates to the interpersonal bond established between the health care professional or interventionist and the family. It is essential that therapists are viewed as professional and knowledgeable as well as available, as the amount and degree of patient change and long-term success is frequently related to the interpersonal relationship between the health care professional and family. Rapport begins at the initial meeting between an interventionist and familyand is established early in therapy. One easy way of establishing rapport with patients is by asking questions, preferably open ended, that relate to their lives or what is important to them. For example, the health professional may ask, “Who is your favorite actor, actress, or sports star?” “Who is your best friend?” “What do you want to be when you grow up?” “How do you feel about your weight?” “Do you want to be healthier?” “Why?” “Why not?” “What do you think you can do to be healthier?” For this reason, an initial group check-in form (Appendix A3.11) are used during the first multidisciplinary outpatient group session in the Committed to Kids program. These initial, nonthreatening interactions, which focus on patient-related concerns, are a good way to break the ice, begin establishing rapport, and facilitate group bonding and dynamics. In addition, information gathered at this time gives the health care professional a better understanding of what the patients view as important and what they feel they can and cannot change. Such factors are extremely important and are detailed in social action theory [22] and motivational interviewing techniques [23,24], the latter of which focuses attention on client-specific expectations, strivings, and problem-solving strategies. Motivational interviewing incorporates the FRAMES model (feedback, responsibility, advise, menu, empathy, self-efficacy) into therapy and provides health care
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professionals with guidelines related to patient interviewing techniques. The Committed to Kids program [18–21] relies heavily on the A-Factor (availability, accountability, attention), which is designed to provide an overall supportive, positive attitude and approach for behavior change in the clinic setting. Participant accountability is reinforced by using a weekly check-in form [21] (Appendix A3.12), which allows participants to discuss accomplishments and difficulties encountered as they progress through the program. Many programs have found that it is beneficial to assess child and parent readiness to change [11–14] or commitment to weight loss efforts [19,21–24] before the initiation of the actual weight loss intervention. The Committed to Kids program, for instance, has parents and children fill out a committment rating scale [21] (Appendix A3.13). Interventionists ask parents and children the following questions during their intake visit: “On a scale from 1 to 100, how important is this weight-loss program to you?” and “How committed are you to trying to change your high-calorie, sedentary behaviors to healthier habits?” A realistic amount of skepticism is expected, but children or parents who rate their initial commitment to following the weight loss program extremely low or who report significant resistance to changing habits should be questioned about the appropriateness of entering into such a program. Supportively confronting the individual (e.g., “It sounds like you or your child is not ready to change your lifestyle,” or “When you’re ready to help yourself or your child in this program, we’ll be here,” or “We find it best not to attempt to treat children and families who would rather not be here or who are extremely resistant to making healthy lifestyle changes”) is the therapist’s best response in this situation. The Committed to Kids program also asks children and parents to fill out the benefits and sacrifices form (Appendix A3.14) which illuminates the participants’ preconceived positive and negative expectations of the program. Most successful weight loss interventions for children (7 to 17 years of age) and their families focus on many relevant factors, including the child’s developmental, cognitive, and social–emotional levels; parental values and behaviors; peer values and behaviors; and the behaviors and values of significant others in the child’s environment. For instance, children must be able to distinguish lowcaloric density foods from those with a high caloric density in various food groups to adhere to a healthy diet. Children must also be able to distinguish activities that are high versus low in terms of energy expenditure to adhere to a healthy activity regimen. Cognitively, children of this age level are capable of such tasks. Piaget would categorize 8- to 10-year-old children’s cognitive abilities in the concrete operational stage. Children at this stage of development are capable of performing logical, reversible mental operations on objects. Children of this age are also capable of serially and conceptually arranging objects or concepts into preexisting categories (assimilation) or into newly developed categories (accommodation). Thus, children of this age are able to make the distinction between high- and low-caloric density foods as well as high- and low-energy expenditure activities that are required for them to eat healthfully and be appropriately active. Most behaviorally based weight loss interventions use a token economy of some sort in their program. The potency of such positive reward systems has been well documented. Epstein et al. [25] and Stark et al. [26], among others, have demonstrated the effectiveness of a token economy in children of this age and younger. Both groups of authors used a token economy to encourage nutritionally balanced eating in 5- to 6-year-old obese children. The result was a significant increase in the children’s consumption of nutritious snacks. In addition, Epstein [27] reported a 40% increase in caloric expenditure in 5- to 8-year-old females who were reinforced for active movements. Thus, it has been well documented that children will respond positively to a token economy system advocating healthier eating and activity behaviors. We have found it essential to provide behavior education for parents and children. This gives all persons involved a common language and reference as well as insight into their behavior, and what motivates and maintains it. For instance, we discuss habit formation with participants, explaining it as “The ABCs of Behavior Change” (Appendix A3.15). It is best to begin by reviewing a nonthreatening or impersonal scenario such as the one provided in the appendix. The antecedents (what comes before the actual behavior, such as feeling sad, smelling food, being bored), behaviors
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(the behavior the participant engages in, such as eating high-calorie food, being sedentary), and consequences (what comes after the behavior, such as feeling guilty, happy, or sad) of the scenario should be discussed and linked to the maintenance of behavior patterns. Next, participants’ “individualized” scenarios should be discussed. Suggestions can be provided or generated by the individual, family, and group concerning how to change overweight habits to healthier ones. Attention, positive or negative, is known to drive and maintain human behavior. It is, therefore, important for interventionists and parents to focus on positive behaviors (those compatible with weight loss) while ignoring negative behaviors (those incompatible with weight loss) during interactions. Health professionals should frequently model such responses for parents and encourage them to make similar responses to their children. For instance, a therapist may say “Great, you took the stairs rather than the elevator to class all week and lost 2 pounds — that’s exciting” or “Fantastic, you had dessert only twice this week and lost 3 pounds.” In addition, the Committed to Kids Program [18–21] uses a four-level treatment approach (based on initial and follow-up measures — at 3, 6, 9, and 12 months — of body mass index [BMI] and fitness level). This allows health professionals another opportunity to positively reinforce children as they progress through the program or graduate from one level to the next. Parents and interventionists are strongly discouraged from focusing negative attention on unhealthy behaviors or noncompliance. Negative reinforcement occurs when negative parental attention (reprimands, humiliation) follows an undesirable child behavior (e.g., parent yells at child when he is caught at the refrigerator between meals or when the child wants to “lounge” all weekend long and does not want to engage in his prescribed exercise program). The child’s undesired behavior typically increases in frequency or intensity (e.g., child is more likely to go to refrigerator between meals or is more likely not to do prescribed exercise) as a result of this negative attention. Health professionals must discourage parents from engaging in negative reinforcement with their child or teen because of its adverse effects. Nagging or “guilt trips” are also strongly discouraged as these responses are a form of negative reinforcement that frequently backfires and fosters counterproductive feelings and behaviors. As such, parents should be encouraged to ignore, redirect, or provide appropriate consequences for their children’s unhealthy behaviors or habits. There are two ways of incorporating behavior change into one’s lifestyle. The first, the “all or none” approach, appears fairly attractive to some families but is discouraged by most health professionals. For example, when parents and children discover the high-calorie nature of fast food, chips, or soda, a frequent response is that they will “never eat these foods again.” This strategy is bound to fail because these foods are highly available and typically preferred by overweight children and their families. A preferred method is the gradual or “shaping” approach to changing behaviors. For instance, a family may decide that they will eat fast food on Friday evening, thus limiting this high-calorie behavior to once a week instead of three or more times per week. After several weeks of success at eating fast food only on Friday, families should be encouraged to try eating fast food every other week on a Friday evening. We call this approach “having your cake and eating it too — only less often.” This approach allows persons to engage in preferred behaviors more responsibly, thus gaining control over high-calorie behaviors, increasing self-efficacy, and facilitating long-term maintenance of weight-loss efforts and habits. However, our clinical experience indicates that the “all-or-none” approach can work for some families some of the time. For instance, a family that “doesn’t really care about or really isn’t into” condiments such as salad dressing or mayonnaise would have no trouble avoiding or replacing those items with healthier options, whereas a family who enjoys these condiments may be more likely to need a gradual, coaxing approach to change from high-fat to low-fat or non-fat varieties.
SETTING LIMITS Parents of overweight children frequently experience great difficulty setting appropriate activity or dietary limits with their children. For instance, very few of our significantly overweight children
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engage in regular physical activity or eat a variety of vegetables (though most eat “starchy” vegetables such as corn, potatoes, or peas). Parental expectations are very important, as they can positively or negatively affect the child’s perceptions of himself as well as the child’s actual behavior. For example, Waxman and Stunkard [28] found that parents of overweight children believe their children require more calories per day and expect less activity from their obese child. The authors reported that overweight children were less active when at home. No difference was found in their activity level outside the home or at school, however, when compared with a control population of normal-weight children. Therefore, for any weight loss intervention to work with children, parents must view it as appropriate and important for their children to follow. As such, it is necessary to empower parents with the skills necessary to set enforceable limits they are comfortable with for their children. One way to accomplish this is to challenge unhealthy behavior patterns such as inactivity and the eating of only selected foods at meals. For instance, parents are encouraged to enforce a “three-bite rule” at all meals for all family members (other programs use the “be polite, take a bite” strategy). Family members are also encouraged to “grade the new foods.” Foods receiving an A through C can be eaten regularly, whereas those receiving a D or F should not be forced on the family. Encourage families to try these non-preferred foods at a much later date or prepared in a much different fashion (e.g., raw versus cooked). Parents are also encouraged to enforce the “30-minute rule,” where children are to be active for 30 minutes when returning home from school, rather than watching television or doing homework. Those family members who adhere to the new family rule or limits are rewarded after each meal or 30-minute burst of activity (e.g., a quarter in their bank or bedtime extended by 30 minutes). Rewards should be provided less frequently once family members adopt the rule (e.g., after 1 week of adherence, the family member gets to choose a fun family weekend event, inexpensive toy, or to have a friend stay the night). Nonadherence should be ignored or simply shrugged off by the parent. An appropriate parent response to nonadherence at lunch may be, “You can always earn a quarter after you try three bites of all foods at dinner tonight, or after riding your bike for 30 minutes tomorrow after school.” Children and families are bound to have difficulty with as well as challenge new house rules or limits so that they can again eat only preferred foods or be inactive. Interventionists must challenge parents and children by highlighting the importance of long-term lifestyle changes in foods eaten and activity undertaken for successful long-term weight loss and maintenance. Health professionals should counteract this inevitability by praising both parents and children on doing well at a task that has been difficult but essential for maintenance of weight loss. Such an approach models the use of positives for parents and allows them to feel the effects first-hand. Parents who repeatedly experience difficulty setting or maintaining new limits may be supportively confronted (preferably in a parent-alone group) with, “So, who is the parent and who makes rules in your house?” or “It sounds like you’re trying to change something about your family that you’re not really comfortable with or serious about; maybe you should try something else, or a different strategy.” Bandura’s social learning theory [3] emphasizes the importance of significant others’ (models such as parents, teachers, or heroes) behavior on human behavior. In summary, we are likely to emulate or model the behavior of significant others in our environment. Children do not model the “advice” but, rather, the actual behavior. As such, parents who enter their child in a weight-loss program should not then purchase or consume high-calorie foods (such as ice cream, cookies, chips) while restricting them from the enrolled child. Similarly, health professionals treating these families would be wise to alter their own behavior and not consume high-calorie foods such as soda or be inactive during sessions. Imagine the embarrassment a professional would experience if an overweight family observed him or her purchasing high-calorie foods at the market or consuming a “super-sized” fast food meal. Likewise, overweight children whose parents are inactive, eat high-calorie food, or provide this food for normal-weight siblings often report feeling angry and discriminated against or unloved. These children are frequently the ones who sneak or purchase high-calorie food when no one is around — and, in fact, do so to spite their parents. Parents and health professionals must seek alternative ways to meet children’s needs and not expose
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these overweight children to such behavior. For instance, if they must, parents may be encouraged to go to lunch and consume a high-calorie dessert outside the child’s presence. Later, the parent may be advised to incorporate the child into this “weekly or bi-monthly treat.” The parent or child might even be advised to try splitting his favorite dessert or entree. A review of the literature examining parental involvement yields conflicting results concerning whether adolescents treated alone or with parents present respond better to weight loss treatment [29–32]. We have found it best to encourage lifestyle changes in the parents, siblings, and extended families of both children and adolescents, regardless of their ages. This allows the entire family to adopt a healthier lifestyle while supporting the child during the change process. This approach also avoids discrimination toward the overweight child. One way to accomplish this is by having families set a weekly goal in addition to having the overweight child set a weekly goal.
SELF-MONITORING OF FOOD AND ACTIVITY Self-monitoring is an excellent way of assisting participants in understanding, controlling, and changing unhealthy behavior patterns (Appendix A3.10). Although genetic factors contribute to disease entities such as obesity, health professionals must impress on participants the importance of changing both food- and activity-related behaviors to achieve and maintain weight loss. Each day, participants record food eaten and activities or exercise during the initial phase (3 months) and are asked to keep these records during the maintenance phase only when experiencing difficulty or weight regain. It is important that participants record as precisely as possible, which aids interventionists in counseling and in tailoring the program to the individual and family. As such, the day, time, and amount and type of food or activity, as well as the feelings associated with eating and activity, are included on the record form and should each be filled in as completely as possible. Depending on the child’s developmental level and ability to write, parents may be encouraged to assist the child in keeping food and activity records. Parents should be discouraged from keeping records for their children. Food and activity records should be reviewed each week by the dietician and exercise physiologist. Children keeping records are praised, whereas those who fail to keep records are ignored (not praised or positively reinforced) and are supportively confronted if the trend continues.
CUE ELIMINATION Ivan Pavlov demonstrated that dogs salivated to the sound of a bell that was consistently rung before their feedings [1]. This same phenomenon holds true for humans. The technique of cue elimination may be used by parents and children and involves physically eliminating the high-calorie or sedentary cues from one’s environment. For instance, if parents do not purchase chips or cookies, these are unavailable to be seen or eaten. Quite literally, the chips and cookies are “out of sight” and “out of mind.” Children may be tempted by the sight or smell of a bakery or fast food restaurant on their way home from school. Simply by taking an alternate route home, the child eliminates the cue and the subsequent temptation to give in to it. Another example of this phenomenon is television commercials full of high-calorie advertisements, which are very tempting. A family who mutes television commercials and does a quick chore, gets active, or walks from room to room during commercials removes this tempting cue and, it is hoped, the high-calorie behaviors associated with it.
STIMULUS CONTROL This technique could also be called “downsizing.” Parents should be encouraged to buy “single servings” rather than “jumbo packages” of tempting or high-calorie foods. Organized parents can also break a “jumbo package” into single servings. This technique may fail when a parent discovers that their overweight child has consumed several “single servings” at one time. A parent in this position should be encouraged to discuss the need to adhere to a single serving of the high-calorie
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food per day. We have found in our clinical experience that most children and families discover one or more “temptation foods” that they have difficulty consuming responsibly. If necessary, the parent should be encouraged to no longer purchase the tempting, high-calorie food and instead consume it only on special occasions when dining out or at the malls, where a single serving may be purchased and eaten, or shared.
GOAL SETTING: SHORT-TERM, LONG-TERM, AND WEEKLY Most behaviorally based lifestyle interventions use goal setting with children and families in an attempt to modify high-calorie, sedentary behaviors into healthier behaviors. This technique reinforces a gradual approach to changing behavior. A short-term (3 months) and long-term (6 to 12 months) goal should be set by participants before starting a weight-loss program (Appendices A3.16 and A3.17. This allows parents and children to discuss personalized views and endpoints of their lifestyle change efforts. Examples of short-term goals may be to maintain current weight, lose 5 to 10 pounds, or walk a half mile without resting. Long-term goals may include walking a 5K race, eating three to five fruits and vegetables a day, or reaching an “ideal” body weight. Participants must be discouraged from setting unrealistic, unattainable short- or long-term goals. Weekly goals are also set that concentrate on changing specific eating and activity behaviors each day or several times during the week. Health professionals should review cognitive restructuring techniques with children and families to facilitate attainment of goals that are set (Appendix A3.18). For example, a family may be encouraged to drink reduced-fat (2%) milk rather than whole (4%) milk for several weeks, followed by another change weeks later to skim milk. Allow families to take an intermediate or smaller step toward goals when necessary (e.g., a family might switch from 4% to 3% to 2% to 1% milk if the 4% to 2% milk switch was too difficult and unattainable). A family might also set a goal to ride their bikes for 20 minutes, 4 days per week. An intermediate step would be to have the family walk or ride bikes for 20 minutes on 3 days. Goals must be small steps, easy to accomplish, and very specific to ensure an easy transition and understanding of what is to be done. We encourage both family- and child-oriented goals. A child’s goal may be to drink water, or some other calorie-free beverage 2 days a week (rather than the juice or soda typically consumed). After several weeks of accomplishing this goal, the child may then be encouraged to drink water 3 days per week. Small incentives or rewards are very helpful and even essential in ensuring the attainment of goals. For example, a pat on the back as well as a trip to the park or skating rink, or an inexpensive toy or other incentive should accompany reaching one’s goal for the week. Incentives should vary (they can be social or material) and be used less frequently as time goes on and behaviors become established. Healthy professionals should strongly discourage, even disallow, using high-calorie food choices as rewards.
GOAL ASSESSMENT The Committed to Kids program asks children and parents to review their previously set goals after 6 weeks of attendance (Appendix A3.19). This allows participants to discuss those goals that have been both easy and difficult for them to accomplish and maintain. It also allows health care professionals to reinforce the importance of maintaining previously set goals and to assist families in problem solving or individualizing their goals and the program.
BEHAVIORAL SUBSTITUTION OR REPLACEMENT Behavioral substitution or replacement is similar to goal setting and involves substituting the eating of high-calorie foods or engaging in sedentary behaviors with the eating of low-calorie foods or engaging in more active behaviors (Appendix A3.20). For example, a child may choose to eat
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frozen yogurt rather than ice cream. Similarly, watching television after school may be replaced with riding a bike or walking the dog around the neighborhood. This technique works best when parents actively participate with their child as well as frequently praise the child for engaging in the new or substituted behavior (e.g., “Great, Johnny, you rode your bike for over an hour after school today instead of watching TV. I’m very proud of you.”). This praise, again, may be diminished over time as the new behavior develops into a new habit. Health professionals should consistently praise both children and families for these changes and attempt to help problem-solve difficult or failed substitutions and replacements. For instance, a therapist could respond, “Maybe it would be easier for your family to have fruit rather than cookies as a snack twice this week” because four times a week was initially too difficult.
RELAPSE PREVENTION Research with individuals who have successfully changed and those who have maintained addictive habits such as smoking and drinking revealed that all persons, successful and unsuccessful, experience difficulty within 6 months of the initial change program, and most slip or lapse into prior, aberrant behavior patterns [33]. Further, it appears that it is the person’s response to this initial lapse that dictates whether he or she will relapse and resort to prior behaviors or will renew their efforts and engage in health-related behaviors. A review of Marlatt and Gordon’s cognitive-behavioral model of the abstinence violation effect highlights participant and family cognitions (primarily their attributions) and situational factors that precede and follow their relapse [33]. These researchers report that successful recovery from relapse is most likely when participants blame the relapse on external, unstable, and specific high-risk factors (e.g., “I always eat fries at fast-food spots” or “It’s hard to resist a hot dog at the ballpark”). Unsuccessful relapse recovery is likely when participants blame the relapse on internal, stable factors (“I’m weak when it comes to desserts; I just can’t say no” or “I always mess up; I’m a failure”). Discuss the Relapse Roadmap with participants and families (Appendix A3.21). Health professionals should highlight the individuals’ and families’ potential sources of relapse as well as their typical responses. A discussion of healthy, acceptable, family or child alternatives should follow. Interventionists should also clarify “slips” as a lapse (once a week), relapse (two to three times a week), or a collapse (four or more times a week) for participants. Lapses or “treats” should be allowed — and even encouraged on occasion — to avoid feelings of deprivation and increase feelings of self-control. Relapses and collapses should be discussed, problem solved, discouraged, and supportively confronted if they continue. As such, we engage in discussions concerning these issues shortly after the intense 3-month portion of our weight-loss program to educate children and families to processes and pitfalls typically encountered by others in health-change programs. We hope that such discussion allows participants to more successfully change behaviors for the long term and not give up or “collapse” in the face of a single or isolated slip or lapse. Some health care professionals promote “planned lapses,” where participants are encouraged to lapse and later discuss their feelings, potential solutions, and outcomes to such events.
APPLIED ACTIVITIES AND EXPERIENCES The Committed to Kids program also covers rules for eating (Appendix A3.22), which is another way for health professionals to help parents set limits or establish new house rules. Behaviors for controlling eating habits and alternative behaviors to eating [21] (Appendix A3.23) are also reviewed. The societal triggers form [21] (Appendix A3.24) illuminates the persons, places, times, and events that either assist or sabotage participants’ weight-loss efforts. Addressing temptations with positive self statements (Appendix A3.25) is also reviewed and discussed during the initial and maintenance phases of the program. Additional ideas for role plays and discussion are also provided (Appendix A3.26), as is a Weight-O-Rama game (Appendix A3.27) that is played with children and families
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at the end of the initial 3-month phase of treatment. Last, the Committed to Kids program incorporates a variety of fun and applied experiences into sessions for the children and families during the maintenance phase. For instance, trips to the grocery store or local parks, recreation activities (such as skating, water slides, picnics, and theme parks), or community events are conducted. These applied sessions allow children and families to practice healthy behaviors in the “real world” while in the presence of supportive interventionists.
FAMILY PHYSICAL ACTIVITY AND FITNESS EDUCATION SESSIONS INTRODUCTION With specialized populations such as overweight children and adolescents, clinicians and educators are at a great disadvantage when attempting to prescribe appropriate activities and deliver educational interventions. By implementing specialized programs that address these issues, successful prevention and treatment of obesity may be possible. Clinical treatment intervention programs designed to promote behavior change should contain activities structured to the specific physical, emotional, and cognitive needs of the participants. Both structured exercise and lifestyle physical activity programs are shown to promote improvements in weight status in short-term [34–39] and long-term [34,40,41] multidisciplinary weightmanagement programs. Younger children, who are naturally active, should be given the opportunity to engage in enjoyable, intermittent exercise of varied intensities and durations, with less emphasis on the improvement of aerobic capacity [21,42,43]. However, older children require more structured programs that include specific recommendations for aerobic, muscular strength and endurance, and flexibility exercises. Research indicates that standard exercise prescription methods may not be applicable in children of different overweight conditions based on the submaximal and maximal response to graded exercise tolerance tests [44–46]. Pediatric weight management programs should, thus, include specialized recommendations specific to the physiologic needs of children of varied weight levels. Alternative modalities of exercise may be considered initially for severely overweight individuals unable to sustain weight-bearing exercise. Intensity, duration, and frequency of exercise should be prescribed in relation to the age, medical history, and weight status of the child. Recommendations should include gradual increases in exercise and daily physical activity, along with consistent behavior modification that includes nutrition and fitness education [47–49]. In all cases, exercises for overweight children should follow the guidelines of the American College of Sports Medicine [50–55].
PEDIATRIC OBESITY AND EXERCISE PERFORMANCE Physical activities for overweight individuals should be appropriate to their specific physiologic needs. Overweight children and adolescents are physiologically and emotionally different from their normal-weight counterparts. In a recent study, Schwimmer and colleagues [56] demonstrated that severely overweight children were five times more likely than healthy children to have impaired physical functioning. The BMI z score among severely overweight children was inversely correlated with physical functioning. In addition, similar findings were reported by Doll and colleagues [57], who observed that physical functioning decreased with increasing weight among adults. Moreover, the authors concluded that the diminished ability to move with increasing weight leads to a decrease in caloric expenditure, with a further mismatch in energy balance leading to additional weight gain — or a vicious cycle [57]. Researchers at the Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center (LSUHSC) in New Orleans determined that children with greater obesity levels respond differently to weight-bearing activity (walking) than do nonoverweight children [58]. The overweight and severely overweight children consistently displayed greater physiologic and metabolic responses for a given level of
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intensity than did the at-risk and normal-weight youth [58]. In a subsequent study, maximal exercise effort (VO2 max) was obtained in 11 overweight children before participation in a pediatric weight management program and again after 10 weeks, using cycle ergometry and indirect calorimetry [46]. There was a significant average weight loss of 8.1 kg (P < .0001), and the average height increased significantly from 157.0 ± 9.0 cm at baseline to 158.1 ± 9.0 cm at 10 weeks (P < .005). The mean BMI decreased significantly from 34.1 ± 4.8 to 29.4 ± 5.8 (P < .001). During the 10-week period, all of the children achieved a lower category of obesity (i.e., from severely overweight [>99th percentile BMI] to overweight [>95th to 99th percentile BMI], from overweight to at risk for overweight [>85th to 95th percentile BMI], and from at risk for overweight to normal weight [<85th percentile BMI]). The increase in relative VO2 max mL/kg per minute from baseline (19.2 ± 3.0 mL/kg per minute) to 10 weeks (22.5 ± 5.8 mL/kg per minute) was significant (P < .001). However, when expressed in absolute values (liters/minute), the baseline measure (1.54 ± 0.26 L/min) did not differ significantly from the 10-week measure (1.54 ± 0.29 L/min), indicating that the improved exercise performance was caused by a reduction in weight status. The results of these studies illustrate that the effect of obesity level on physiologic function during weight-bearing activity in overweight children is relative to the intensity of the exercise, and that during weightbearing activity of increasing intensities, the disparity between the different levels of obesity may be increased. In addition, short-term weight loss improves exercise tolerance in overweight youth. Increasing levels of obesity may decrease exercise performance because less mechanical work is performed to overcome friction between the thighs, arms, and torso of the overweight individual when walking and pulmonary function may be impaired because overweight individuals must move a heavier body mass forward. Thus, in overweight children, an increased cardiac output and respiratory effort are required to maintain a similar level of work to accommodate the excess load. Finally, during weight-bearing exercise, such as walking, the skeletal musculature is responsible for supporting and moving the entire body mass forward. The increased recruitment of muscle to compensate for the additional fat weight load thereby results in an increased uptake in oxygen. When overweight children exercise at submaximal workloads, excessive body weight induces an excess load that increases the energy required to maintain the same level of exertion as nonoverweight children [59,60]. This is important information that can be used to set appropriate, specific exercise guidelines for overweight children. Neiman [61] was the first to suggest that individuals with varied levels of obesity should receive specialized programs specific to their weight status. The level approach has been successfully implemented in cardiac rehabilitation programs where clinicians implement specific exercise guidelines for each stage of recovery following heart surgery [62]. In addition, the program provides the patient with repeated short-term opportunities to succeed and be promoted to increasing levels of competency.
EXERCISE INSTRUCTION IN INTERACTIVE, INTERDISCIPLINARY CLINICAL SETTINGS Researchers at the LSUHSC and Pennington Biomedical Research Center have evaluated a program that provides quality medical, nutritional, psychosocial, and exercise intervention for at risk and obese children along with their families in a weekly outpatient clinical setting [18,21,49,63–65]. The program is unique because of its integrated, four-level approach that encourages short-term (12-week) goal-setting, quarterly feedback, and motivational techniques to improve health behaviors (Table 20.1) [1,63–66]. The interdisciplinary, four-level exercise program is an individualized approach to the prevention and treatment of obesity conducted in a family group setting. Weight loss is just a by-product of the overall focus of the program that is to assist the patient and his or her family in making healthy lifestyle changes, thus promoting positive alterations in body weight. The group family
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TABLE 20.1 Initial Physical Activity Strategies by Medical History, Age, and Weight Condition [18,21,63]a Level
Age, Years
Physical Activity Approach
Normal Wt ≥1 obese parent >85th BMI >95th BMI
≤6
Family counseling, fitness education, free play, reduction of television watching, parent training
7–18 7–18
>99th BMI
7–18
Structured weight-bearing activities, free play, reduction of television watching, parent training Alternate non-weight-bearing activities, free play, reduction of television watching, parent training Non-weight-bearing activities, free play, reduction of television watching, parent training b
a b
Approach should be adjusted every 3–6 months depending upon child’s progress. Close medical supervision required.
setting has the added benefit of encouraging parent and peer modeling and support among the participants. Unlike the typical physical education class or youth recreational program in which the overweight child often feels inhibited, in the interdisciplinary, four-level exercise setting, all of the students and family members feel comfortable around peers who possess similar levels of physical conditioning. The appropriate exercise intensity and skill level of the activities guarantee initial success to all participants. The structured exercise protocol and physical activity education includes a moderate-intensity progressive exercise program (MPEP) for children with increasing levels of obesity [18,21,52,63,65]. The model is based on a treatment approach suggested by Neiman and is similar to the medical cardiac rehabilitation model [61,62]. The intervention methods use social cognitive theory [66] and self-efficacy beliefs [64], which motivate children and adolescents to change their behavior by providing mastery experiences, physiological feedback, knowledge transfer, and real or imagined role models (see Chapter 14 for more information). The exercise recommendations are specific to the different levels of obesity (i.e., initially the severely overweight children have shorter beginning durations and frequencies than the overweight children or those at risk for developing overweight conditions (at-risk)). Initially, at-risk children are advised to exercise more than overweight and severely overweight children. Severely overweight children initially are also prescribed less challenging activities. In addition, because excess fat weight places an increased burden on an individual’s cardiorespiratory and musculoskeletal systems, the recommended exercise activities for the overweight and severely overweight adolescents are “arm specific” and less weight bearing. Students are allowed to choose the type of aerobic activity from an extensive list provided in the program book [21]. The approach includes not only guidelines for exercise frequency, duration, and intensity (see Chapter 14) but also a series of 52 weekly dynamic and interactive group sessions that promote increased physical activity and improved body movement awareness [21,45,63–65]. The program also includes specific recommendations for type or modality of exercise based on the individual overweight level and physiologic function (Tables 20.2 to 20.4) [21,52,58,60,63]. This specialized program is designed to ensure that the recommended physical activities may be successfully performed by individuals with various overweight conditions. In addition, the educational content is organized in a developmentally appropriate manner that is easily comprehended by students of all ages. Therefore, the program is designed to better serve the emotional and cognitive, as well as physiologic, needs of overweight individuals. By providing activities that illicit initial success, it is proposed that the program will improve mastery concepts, thereby increasing self-efficacy beliefs [64,66]. During the 1-year program, participants and their families attend weekly 2-hour comprehensive sessions. During these sessions, patients receive medical supervision, nutrition instruction, physical
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TABLE 20.2 Children at Risk for Overweight Conditions (>85th BMI), 7–18 Years of Age Limit access to television/video/computer Recommended Aerobic Activities [21,63]: weight-bearing such as brisk walking, treadmill, field sports, inline skating, roller skating, hiking, racket ball, tennis, martial arts, skiing, jump rope, indoor/outdoor tag games. Parent training and fitness education Pacing skills Note: Guidelines should be readjusted every 10–15 weeks based on evaluation results.
TABLE 20.3 Overweight Children (>95th percentile BMI), 7–18 Years of Age Limit access to television/video/computer Recommended Aerobic Activities [21,63]: alternate non-weight-bearing such as swimming, cycling, arm ergometer (crank), recline bike, with strength/aerobic circuit training, arm-specific aerobic dancing, and interval walking a Parent training and fitness education Note: Guidelines should be readjusted every 10–15 weeks based on evaluation results. a
Walking with frequent rests, as necessary. Gradually work up to longer walking periods and fewer rest stops.
TABLE 20.4 Severely Overweight Children (>99th percentile BMI), 7–18 Years of Age Limit access to television/video/computer Recommended aerobic activities [21,63]: non-weight-bearing only such as swimming, recline bike, arm ergometer, seated (chair) aerobics, and seated or lying circuit training Parent training and fitness education Other emotional and dietary concerns must be addressed during treatment Note: Guidelines should be readjusted every 10–15 weeks based on evaluation results
activity education, exercise activities, and behavior modification. Exercise instruction is conducted at each visit by a clinical exercise physiologist and includes fitness counseling. Each session is a mixture of sharing information on topics such as heart-rate monitoring and injury prevention, as well as the actual exercise [21,63]. In addition, fitness counseling includes motivational techniques to increase daily activity levels and improve body movement awareness based on social cognitive theory [3,66]. The exercise activities correspond with the group’s physiological condition of obesity and ability to comprehend, synthesize, and apply health and fitness information to daily-life situations. The structured exercise component (MPEP) includes three types of exercise: cardiorespiratory endurance or aerobic exercise, muscular strength and endurance exercise, and muscular flexibility exercise. The muscular strength and endurance and the flexibility exercises are illustrated in detail in the program book [21] and are also demonstrated in the exercise DVD (Appendix A3.1.1). The exercise DVD (Appendix A3.1.1) contains 5 minutes of slow movement to music as a warm-up (Appendix A3.3). Thirty to 45 minutes of moderate-intensity, low-impact aerobic dancing follows the warm-up. A 20-minute strength training session begins after a 5-minute period of slow movement (cool down [Appendix A3.3]). Eight to 12 strength exercises are performed to music,
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using hand and leg weights (Table 20.5). The routine is balanced focusing on all of the major muscle groups. The students perform one set of 10 to 12 repetitions of slow movement (2 to 4 seconds to lift or pull [concentric], 2 to 4 seconds to lower or release [eccentric]) for each of the strength exercises. Careful attention is given to proper technique, full extension of the joints, and full contraction of the muscles. The exercise DVD (Appendix A3.1.1) ends with 5 minutes of flexibility exercises designed to balance the physique and enhance posture (Table 20.6). Students are explained how to use the exercise DVD (Appendix A3.1.1) and how to record their activities on the Aerobic Activity and Food Checklist (Appendix A3.10). The checklist, which lists the frequency, duration, and type of exercise, is kept by each student and is checked weekly by the exercise physiologist. Students are also instructed on how to obtain heart rates and rates of perceived exertion [67] during exercise sessions to ensure compliance with the moderate exercise intensity (45 to 55% VO2 max or 55 to 65% maximal heart rate). Incentives, in the form of awards, are given for consistent reporting of exercise patterns and for overall compliance with the weightmanagement program. The program is also prescribed for use at home, and children are encouraged to select a variety of aerobic activities that they enjoy [21,46,49,68]. The primary objective of the four-level exercise program is to motivate students to adopt specific behaviors associated with long-term emotional, physical, and psychological health (i.e., the reduction
TABLE 20.5 Strength Exercises [21,52,65] Exercise Leg extension Leg curl Rowing Overhead press Biceps curl Triceps extension Pelvic tilt Dumbbell press Low back extenson Crunch Squat Standing calf
Muscle Groups Quadriceps Hamstrings Upper back Shoulders Biceps Triceps Gluteals, hips Chest Low back Abdominals Gluteals, quadriceps Calf
TABLE 20.6 Flexibility Exercises [18,21,63] Exercise Shoulder stretch Chest stretch Upper back stretch Single rear shoulder stretch Lying quad stretch Seated hamstring stretch Modified butterfly stretch Butterfly stretch Straddle stretch Calf stretch
Muscle Groups Shoulder Chest Upper back Shoulder Quadriceps Hamstrings Hips, hamstrings Hips, hamstrings Hips, hamstrings, quadriceps Calf
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of overall body weight, the improvement of eating patterns, and the increase in the daily energy expenditure). Students learn to identify safe and effective methods for achieving and maintaining weight loss. They acquire knowledge of the basic principles of good nutrition and healthy eating patterns. They become aware of their eating behaviors and activity patterns and learn alternate behaviors to promote long-term health. In terms of fitness, students gain the body movement awareness necessary to adopt activity patterns that will promote long-term health. The exercise program has been evaluated in several investigations [18,46,48,49,52,64,65,69]. The comprehensive, integrated, four-level approach is successful because of several factors: first, the program features entertaining nutrition and exercise education for children, as well as parenttraining methods in short, interactive sessions; second, the improved exercise tolerance resulting from the weight loss promotes increased physical activity; and third, the program team provides consistent feedback. The patients and their families receive results and updates every 3 months. Most important, the program is conducted in groups of families, and the parents’ participation in exercise class is strongly encouraged. The program also encourages participation in a graded exercise test before the beginning of the intervention program, at the end of the 6-month weight-loss intervention, and annually thereafter. The results of the test are used to individualize the exercise recommendations and provide positive feedback to encourage continued participation. Although the four-level recommendations are appropriate for most overweight youth, the results of the exercise test provide additional information that will assist in determining the most appropriate initial modality, intensity, duration, and frequency of exercise. In addition, the results of the test will help to determine compliance with the proposed exercise recommendations. Moderate progressive exercise sessions at weekly 2-hour sessions include warm-up and cooldown exercises, low-impact aerobics, brisk walking, cycling, strength training, proper exercise techniques, and team sports (Tables 20.2 to 20.4). The specific guidelines for levels 1, 2, and 3 are as follows.
CARDIORESPIRATORY ENDURANCE
OR
AEROBIC EXERCISES
The children will be allowed to choose the type of aerobic activity. A list of appropriate activities is included in the program book [21]. However, children are advised to adhere to the following guidelines: Intensity: 45 to 55% VO2 max (approximately 55 to 65% of heart rate maximum) Frequency: One to two times per week in week 1, gradually increasing to five to six times per week in weeks 12 to 30 (see Chapter 14) Duration: 20 to 30 minutes per session in week 1, gradually increasing to 45 to 60 minutes in weeks 12 to 30 (see Chapter 14)
MUSCULAR STRENGTH
AND
ENDURANCE EXERCISES
Intensity: 60 to 80% of one repetition maximum. Frequency: One time per week in week 1, gradually increasing to two times per week in weeks 12 to 30 (see Chapter 14) Resistance training may be used safely to enhance the efforts to prevent and reverse childhood obesity and other chronic pediatric diseases in clinic-based interventions [44,55,70,71]. Strength exercises, specifically designed for overweight children, are performed in one set of 8 to 12 repetitions (Table 20.5). The movement time is 2 to 4 seconds concentric and 2 to 4 seconds eccentric through a full range of motion. Children under 14 years of age begin at the lowest intensity. Proper technique is emphasized. Participants increase load (weight or resistance) only when the 12th repetition is performed with ease and in perfect form.
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MUSCULAR FLEXIBILITY EXERCISES A balanced routine of 10 static stretches specifically designed for overweight children will be performed five times a week (Table 20.6). Dynamic stretches are included in the warm-up and cool-down periods of the aerobic exercise sessions. Family intervention is an integral component of the interdisciplinary, four-level exercise program. In other studies, family-based programs in which parents were trained to reinforce their children’s physical activity have been shown to increase both activity and fitness levels in overweight children and adolescents [41,72–76]. Healthy-weight, as well as overweight, parents, siblings, and extended family are encouraged to participate in the many varied activities offered during the exercise portion of the weekly meetings. Likewise, parents’ participation at home with their children during exercise sessions improves compliance and overall success.
SUMMARY The interdisciplinary, four-level exercise program is based on the individual needs of children in different ranges of obesity. In each level, the activities described have been chosen because they are safe and effective for the child with a particular overweight physical condition. Also, because these are physically inactive youth, the duration and frequency increase gradually, about 10% per week [77]. Although the learning activities are designed to be somewhat interchangeable, the instructor should not deviate from the recommended movement technique or intensity of an individual exercise. Some activities may be interchanged, but only if their technical aspects and intensities are similar. Instructors may also introduce movement or activities of their own creation, but only if these are similar in technique and intensity to the recommended exercises and are implemented cautiously. Do not compromise safety for the sake of creativity. If you are unsure whether a movement is safe or appropriate for the overweight children in your class, then choose another activity. The interactive, interdisciplinary environment promotes positive attention, student accountability, and teacher availability. The overweight students learn while they participate in physical activity. They move while they listen. They are provided with specific activities that are challenging but that may always be accomplished. Positive attention reinforces their behavior changes. Teachers and parents become the positive role models for the children in the family. Short-term goals are set and reached. As the overweight individual graduates from one level to another, he or she increases his or her physical activity and, thus, his or her level of fitness. He also increases his knowledge of health and fitness concepts and his ability to manage his weight and medical condition more effectively. The remainder of this chapter provides a sample interactive, interdisciplinary exercise curriculum for children with varied overweight levels (Table 20.7). A list of suggested activities that can be used as additional exercise sessions in group interactive, interdisciplinary weight management settings may be found in Table 20.8. The skills required for the activities at each level are easily attained to ensure that overweight children will experience mastery, which will motivate them to continue the program. If you notice that during an activity any child is having difficulty, please adjust the activity accordingly.
LESSON 1: BENEFITS OF EXERCISE, EXERCISE SAFETY, WARMINGUP, EXERCISE PRESCRIPTION, AND INCREASING YOUR DAILY ACTIVITY — THE MPEP-STEP Materials needed include books (program book [21]), exercise attire, CD player for music, exercise mats, exercise DVD (Appendix A3.1.1), aerobic activity, and food checklist (Appendix A3.10).
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TABLE 20.7 Exercise Lesson Plans — Suggested Activities [18,21,63] Lesson Lesson Lesson Lesson Lesson Lesson Lesson Lesson Lesson Lesson
1: Benefits of Exercise, Exercise Safety, Warming Up and Increasing Your Daily Activity — The MPEP-STEP 2: Exercise Intensity and Pacing Skills (Metabolic Systems), Cooling Down after Exercise 3: Aerobic Exercise — Modified Field Sports, The Homework Rule 4: Muscular Strength and Endurance: MPEP PUMP, Strength Training Circuit, Creating Indoor Play Areas 5: Family Field Sports — Aerobic Volleyball, Creating Outdoor Play Areas 6: Flexibility, Flex Test I, and Stretch and Flex Class 7: Aerobic Exercise and Cardiopulmonary Endurance, Steady State — Monitoring Heart Rate and Aerobic Circuit 8: Exercise Prescriptions: the Fit Kit Walking Program 9. Review Muscular Strength and Endurance: Pull Your Own Weight Series 10. Park Day — Outdoor Play
TABLE 20.8 Additional Exercise Sessions — Suggested Activities [18,21,63] Water Aerobics Specialty Aerobics (Guest Instructor) Body Sculpting I: Injury Prevention; Individual Differences (body composition); Exercise Myths [21] Line Dancing Rockin’ to the Oldies Aerobic Dance [21] Modified Yoga Getting the Most Out of Your Workout; 20 Ways to Burn 20 Calories [21] Super Abdominals [21] Tennis Lesson and Drills Cross Training [21] Band-Aid for Out-of-Shape Muscles [21] (Muscular Strength and Endurance) Field Day — Annual Martial Arts: Demonstrations Team Sports: Basketball The MPEP Ultimate Workout [21] Ultimate Frisbee™ Field Trip: Fun Walk/Run Race in the Park Advanced Resistance Training Field Trip: Roller Skating — Annual Party Field Trip: Walk in the Park Field Trip: Water Slide/Park Combined Strength and Aerobic Circuit Beach Party Aerobics with Beach Balls Balloon games [21] (Balloon Pop; Battle Ball) Body Sculpting II: Standing Strength Class to Music Relays: Indoor or Outdoor Aerobic Musical Chairs [21] Aerobic Equipment Triathlon Power Sports: Guest Speaker: Pro Athlete Tennis Game Obstacle Course Holiday Games [21]: Aerobic Easter Egg Hunt Charades; Thanksgiving Family Flag Football; Fourth of July Family Field Games Keeping Fit on Your Trip — Vacation Strategies [21]
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Briefly discuss the health benefits of being physically active [21]. Review the safety rules located in Appendix A3.3. Discuss the importance of warming up. Demonstrate warm-up movements to music (Appendix A3.3). Discuss the specific exercise guidelines for each level of overweight (Appendix A3.3), referring parents to the program book [21] and exercise DVD (Appendix A3.1.1). Emphasize the importance of filling out the Aerobic Activity and Food Checklist (Appendix A3.10). Ask the parents to take a moment to observe their child’s demeanor. Notice his or her posture, how quickly or slowly he or she walks, his or her overall physique, and how it makes him or her look. Then ask children to walk around the room so their parents can watch. Most children shuffle slowly with bent heads and shoulders rolled forward. See Appendix A3.3 for verbal cues. Explain that lots of overweight kids move slowly, with hunched shoulders, appearing as though they do not feel confident. Improving the way your child walks can burn considerably more calories and make him or her look and feel healthier. Explain to the parent and child that burning calories does not only happen when one is doing hard exercise or playing — calories are burned all the time. Verbal cues located in Appendix A3.3 can help relay this concept and invite the children to quicken their pace. You will then encourage the children to walk more briskly, with better posture. Tell them that this is called the MPEP-Step (“MPEP” stands for “Moderate Intensity Progressive Exercise Program”). Demonstrate how to do the MPEP-Step, and then ask the children to do it. Remind them that when they walk with their chins up, shoulders back, and in a brisk manner, they appear taller, trimmer, and more in control. Plus, walking with the MPEP-Step burns about 350 to 450 calories per hour. Tell the parents to encourage their child to walk this way every day — no matter where he or she is or what he or she is doing — for the next week. Better yet, tell parents to model this behavior for their child from here on.
LESSON 2: EXERCISE INTENSITY AND PACING SKILLS (METABOLIC SYSTEMS), COOLING DOWN AFTER EXERCISE Materials needed include books (program book [21]), exercise attire, portable stereo, exercise mats, exercise DVD (Appendix A3.1.1), and aerobic activity and food checklist (Appendix A3.10) Children will interact by moving to different types of music at different intensities. During the first 10 minutes of the class, the exercise instructor will demonstrate very simple moves that are easily mastered by the patients. During this time, the concept of low-intensity aerobic exercise will be discussed. Gradually the intensity and speed of the music will increase in an effort to illustrate how the body shifts from aerobic to anaerobic metabolism. The benefits and drawbacks to each will be discussed as the participants dance to the music (Appendix A3.3). The class will end in a cool-down or return to low intensity, followed by stretching exercise. Kids follow the instructor’s verbal cues (Appendix A3.3) for the cool-down exercise segment.
LESSON 3: AEROBIC EXERCISE — MODIFIED FIELD SPORTS, THE HOMEWORK RULE Materials needed included books (program book [21]), exercise attire, portable stereo, aerobic activity and food checklist (Appendix A3.10), softballs, bats, bases, home plate, field markers (cones), soccer goal, soccer ball, colored flag belts or scarves, football, and whistle, The students and parents will participate in a soccer game outdoors. The warm-up will include a soccer skill review followed by drills for about 5 minutes. When organizing teams use this method: Tell the students and parents to make a “train” behind you. Then assign every other participant to a different color. For example: red team, blue team, red team. Assign the red team to one side of the field and the blue team to the other.
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Periodic breathing and heart-rate checks will illustrate to the kids and parents how soccer raises the metabolic rate, thus encouraging an increase in activity levels and calories burned. To make the soccer game more aerobic or steady-state, and to increase caloric expenditure, try these modifications: announce to the kids and parents that you are playing by aerobic rules. Allow the ball to go outside of the regular boundaries to keep it in play. Only call the ball out of bounds when it presents a danger to the kids. Otherwise, the ball is always in play. This will increase the amount of total physical activity because overall play will not stop as a result of the referee assigning a player to pass the ball back into play. If you do call the ball out of bounds, allow 3 seconds only for placing the ball back in play from the sideline or the goal. The team loses the ball if they exceed 3 seconds. In addition, every 5 to 10 minutes alternate the playing assignments from offense to defense. This will allow all students a chance to do both vigorous and moderate activity in small enough doses so that they do not become too fatigued. At the conclusion of the class, the instructor should introduce the Homework Rule (Appendix A3.3). In addition, detailed descriptions of other modified field sports may be found in Appendix A3.3.
LESSON 4: MUSCULAR STRENGTH AND ENDURANCE: MPEP PUMP, STRENGTH TRAINING CIRCUIT, CREATING INDOOR PLAY AREAS Materials needed include books (program book [21]), exercise DVD (Appendix A3.1), fat and lean weight models, exercise attire, chairs, exercise mats, aerobic activity and food checklist (Appendix A3.10), station markers, hand weights, exercise resistance band, and a stopwatch. Discuss the benefits of strength training and factors that affect the results. Proper technique and methods should be emphasized. Dismiss weight-lifting myths, using verbal cues (Appendix A3.C.4.a) for the children. The instructor should pass around models of muscle tissue and fat tissue for the kids to feel and observe using verbal cues in Appendix A3.3. The instructor reviews the technique for the strength exercises. These are illustrated in the program book [21] and in the second half of the exercise DVD (Appendix A3.1.1). The children will then participate in a circuit strength-training session. The strength-training stations will follow the exercises illustrated in the program book [21] and on the Strength and Flexibility Workout Chart [21]. During the circuit, the instructor will discuss facts concerning strength training. A balanced routine of 8 to 12 muscular strength and endurance exercises (moderate-high intensity, 60 to 80% of one repetition maximum [MPEP pump]), specifically designed for overweight children, should be performed. Children begin performing the exercises as instructed on the exercise DVD without weight or resistance for a 4-week period according to the goals suggested on the exercise record cards. During the fourth week, the exercise physiologist instructs the children on the proper technique during the scheduled weekly session. During the session, parents are enlisted as spotters to ensure safety. The children are then instructed to perform the exercise routine according to the DVD instruction and as indicated on the exercise record cards, twice per week, with at least 1 day of rest between sessions. The children initially use 1-pound weights in each hand and 1- to 3-pound weights on each ankle to perform the exercises. They initially perform eight repetitions per exercise, with emphasis on proper technique. When eight repetitions are performed in perfect form with ease, the exercises are then increased to nine repetitions. This pattern continues until 12 repetitions can be done in perfect form. The amount of weight to be lifted is then increased to 3 pounds for each hand and 3 to 5 pounds for each ankle, and the repetitions are reduced to eight per exercise. The progression described above is then repeated. Exercises for the upper and middle back muscles use an exercise band. Children use the band with lowest resistance initially and then progress through the same pattern of increased repetitions and intensity. The complete resistance training circuit, consisting of 8 to 12 different exercises, can be easily performed in 20 to 30 minutes.
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Parents can be recruited as spotters for the kids, or the kids can be paired as buddies: as one child is executing the exercise the buddy or parent spots, and then they change places. At the completion of the circuit, using verbal cues (Appendix A3.3), the instructor will then review methods to create indoor play areas in the home.
LESSON 5: FAMILY FIELD SPORTS — AEROBIC VOLLEYBALL, CREATING OUTDOOR PLAY AREAS Materials needed include books (program book [21]), exercise attire, volleyball net, soft volleyball or beach ball, portable stereo, and aerobic activity and food checklist (Appendix A3.10) The instructor will gather the children and their family members and set up a volleyball game. Select a game set that includes a soft volleyball or use a beach ball instead. You will need some music to make it complete — along with these few additional guidelines: When the opposing team scores a point, the receiving team has to do 10 aerobic moves to the music such as aerobic dance moves (modified jumping jacks, the twist, the grapevine, and the cha-cha) while the ball is being retrieved. When the serving team gets a “side out” (they lose the point and the serve to the opposing team), they have to do 10 dance movements to the music. It’s also fun to ask those who fumble the ball or foul to walk, jog, or dance around the court. At the end of the volleyball game, the instructor will discuss methods to create outdoor play areas in the home using verbal cues in Appendix A3.3.
LESSON 6: FLEXIBILITY, FLEX TEST I, AND FLEX AND STRETCH CLASS Materials needed include books (program book [21]), exercise DVD (Appendix A3.1.1), pen or pencil, exercise attire, chairs, exercise mats, portable stereo, and aerobic activity and food checklist (Appendix A3.10). The instructor will discuss the importance of flexibility using verbal cues (Appendix A3.3). In pairs, students will be guided through the Flex Test sequence located in the program book [21]. The instructor will emphasize the importance of balance as it relates to flexibility and strength. The instructor will guide the parents and children through an evaluation of different areas of the body. Initially, the parent will observe the child from a side view to determine whether the head and shoulders are aligned with the rest of the body. An appropriate area will be checked in the program book if an imbalance is present. The child will then observe the parent. The instructor will discuss methods to correct the imbalances. He or she will also demonstrate corrective exercises. The parents and children will repeat this process with the other areas of the body (back, knees, etc.). The class will end with a stretching routine to music. Students will be shown how to keep the knees “soft” (or slightly bent) and not locked or overextended during activities. Corrective exercises, designed to improve the imbalanced areas of the body, will be introduced. The Flex and Stretch series in the program book [21] and exercise DVD (Appendix A3.1.1) will be reviewed to music. A sample stretching exercise is located in Appendix A3.3.
LESSON 7: AEROBIC EXERCISE AND CARDIOPULMONARY ENDURANCE, STEADY STATE — MONITORING HEART RATE AND AEROBIC CIRCUIT Materials needed include books (program book [21]), exercise attire, portable stereo, exercise mats, jump rope, aerobic activity and food checklist (Appendix A3.10), station markers, and a stopwatch. Optional equipment includes a treadmill, cycle ergometer, rowing ergometer, rowing machine, or stair climber.
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Students will participate in an aerobic station routine. A different aerobic move will be described on a card. Each student will begin at one of the stations. After 2 minutes of movement to music, the instructor will call “rotate” and the students will move in a clockwise fashion to the next station. This continues until all stations have been visited. Alternatively, you may choose to conduct the aerobic circuit using available aerobic exercise equipment. For example: station 1, treadmill; station 2, side jacks; station 3, cycle ergometer; station 4, heel backs with arms up; station 5, rowing ergometer; station 6, twist; station 7, stair climber; and so on. The instructor uses station markers and guides the students from one station to another. Two minutes should be spent at each station, followed by 30 seconds to change stations. The instructor may choose to use music to help motivate the children. Using the verbal cues (Appendix A3.3), the instructor should then discuss heart rate monitoring.
LESSON 8: EXERCISE PRESCRIPTIONS: THE FIT KIT WALKING PROGRAM Materials needed include books (program book [21]), exercise attire, exercise DVD (Appendix A3.1.1), pedometers (optional), and aerobic activity and food checklist (Appendix A3.10). The instructor will discuss the importance of exercise to maintaining weight loss. He or she will review “The Fit Kit Walking Program” located in the program book [21], using verbal cues (Appendix A3.3). The parents and children will be encouraged to begin the program as a family project. The instructor may choose to encourage the families to purchase pedometers so that they may track the distance walked each day and week.
LESSON 9: REVIEW MUSCULAR STRENGTH AND ENDURANCE: PULL YOUR OWN WEIGHT SERIES Materials needed include books (program book [21]), exercise attire, portable stereo, exercise mats, exercise DVD (Appendix A3.1.1), and aerobic activity and food checklist (Appendix A3.10). The instructor will review muscular strength and endurance facts and the exercises listed in the program book [21]. He or she will lead a class in the Pull Your Own Weight Series in the program book [21], using only the child’s own body weight. Follow the instructions and follow the verbal cues as listed in Appendix A3.3. Sample exercises are also located in Appendix A3.3.
LESSON 10: PARK DAY — OUTDOOR PLAY Materials needed include books (program book [21]), exercise attire, portable stereo, aerobic activity and food checklist (Appendix A3.10), various outdoor game and play equipment, water containers, water, ice, and tables. Family and friends will be encouraged to join the students in a Park Day/Outdoor Play. One week prior, the instructor will inform the students to bring a bike, roller skates, roller blades, skateboard, and so on to class on this day. The students, family, and friends will be allowed to circle the park in groups using whatever equipment they bring along. Water stations will be set up at one-half to 1-mile intervals. The instructor may choose to set up volleyball nets, soccer goals, and so on and to bring extra balls along for those children who do not want to walk and do not have bikes, skates, and so forth. Additional ideas for family fitness field trips are listed in Table 20.9.
NUTRITION EDUCATION SESSIONS An overview of the interactive, interdisciplinary nutrition education program is provided in Chapter 12 by Schumacher and colleagues. In this chapter, we provide five additional lesson plans that can
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TABLE 20.9 Additional Suggestions for Nutrition Education Sessions Questions and Answers; Write Your Own Sample Meal Plan [21] Cooking Demonstrations: Fun in the Kitchen — Vegetable Stir-Fry [21] Individual Sessions Cooking Demonstrations: Fun in the Kitchen — Healthy Omelets [21] Class Discussion: Restaurant Choices — Healthy Restaurant Dining [21] Class Discussion: Low-Fat/Low-Calorie Cooking Guidelines and Substitutions Food Lab: Starch and Bread Group Food Lab: Milk/Dairy and Fat Groups Class Discussion: Write Your Own Restaurant Menu Class Discussion: Recipe Substitution Exercise [21] Class Discussion: Supermarket Smarts Class Discussion/Taste Testing: Lean Meat and Substitute Choices Class Discussion/Taste Testing: Healthy Snacks Cooking Demonstrations: Fun in the Kitchen — Yogurt Fruit Dip [21] Cooking Demonstrations: Fun in the Kitchen — Healthy Holiday Recipes Understanding Food Labels [21] Cooking Demonstrations: Fun in the Kitchen: Low-Fat Breakfast Sausage Balancing Your Way to Good Nutrition: Vitamins and Minerals [21] Healthy Breakfasts [21] Food-Label Jeopardy
be implemented in a family-based, multidisciplinary weight management setting. A listing of additional suggestions for nutrition education sessions is located in Table 20.9.
DIET INSTRUCTION Materials needed include the program book [21], protein-modified fast diet handout (Appendix A3.G), and notepad and pen. This lesson should be instructed to severely overweight children only with close medical supervision. Review the protein-modified fast diet (Appendix A3.8), discuss vitamin and mineral supplementation, and review the process for filling out the aerobic activity and food checklist (Appendix A3.10).
FOOD LABS: FRUIT
AND
VEGETABLE GROUP
Materials needed include the table of food portions and units (Appendix A3.D), food groups/units (Appendix A3.4), recipes (Appendix A3.6), program book [21], fruit juice (apple, orange, grape, cranberry), fresh fruit, dried fruit, measuring cups and spoons, large bowl of lettuce, salad dressing, cooked broccoli, cheese sauce, cooked vegetables, and V-8™ or tomato juice Instruction: Review fruit and vegetable units (Appendix A3.4) Activity: Measure items and calculate caloric value; emphasize different caloric values; have class estimate caloric and fat values before weighing; emphasize caloric density Specific activities: 1. Measure out one exchange/serving of fruit juice into a glass; emphasize the caloric density of fruit juice by calculating the caloric value of a 12-oz glass of grape juice 2. Calculate the caloric value of various fresh fruits 3. Measure out one exchange/serving of dried fruit; emphasize caloric density of dried fruit 4. Measure items and calculate caloric value
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Activity: Emphasize different caloric and fat values before and after additions such as salad dressing and cheese sauce. Specific activities (have participants volunteer to measure items): 1. Measure lettuce and calculate the caloric value. Add one tablespoon of salad dressing (average salad dressing value is 100 calories and 10 g fat per tablespoon) at a time, calculating caloric value after each addition. Emphasize caloric difference between plain lettuce and lettuce with various amounts of salad dressing. 2. Measure and calculate the caloric value of broccoli. Add one tablespoon cheese sauce (average cheese sauce value is 50 calories and 5 g fat per tablespoon) at a time, calculating the caloric value after each addition. Emphasize the caloric difference between plain broccoli and broccoli and various amounts of cheese sauce. 3. Measure and calculate the caloric value of various vegetables including vegetable juice.
COOKING DEMONSTRATIONS: FUN
IN THE
KITCHEN — OVEN-FRIED CHICKEN
Materials needed include the recipe located in program book [21]; skinless, boneless chicken breasts; bread crumbs or flour; egg substitute; nonstick cooking spray; baking sheet; and an oven. Activity: Prepare oven-fried chicken Specific Instructions: Preheat the oven to 370˚F. Dip the chicken breasts in the egg substitute, then into the bread crumbs. Repeat this process for an extra-crispy coating. Spray a baking sheet with the nonstick cooking spray and place the chicken breasts onto the sheet. Bake at 370˚F for 45 minutes or until chicken is cooked throughout. Thoroughly wash your hands and all work surfaces with soap after handling raw meat. Discuss the caloric value and nutrient content of the recipe. Allow children and parents to sample the oven-fried chicken following the exercise session.
NUTRITION GAMES: FAST-FOOD FOLLIES Materials needed include grilled chicken sandwich (no mayonnaise or cheese), small fries, diet drink, double-meat sandwich, large fries, regular drink, fried chicken dinner, and biscuit. Activity: Review Fast-Food List in program book [21]. Have participants volunteer to weigh food. Calculate caloric and fat content of various fast-food meals in class. Compare best and worst choices (fried chicken dinner vs. grilled chicken dinner and bacondouble cheeseburger with large fries and a regular drink vs. grilled chicken sandwich with small fries and a diet drink) Measure and weigh items in class. Have participants touch and feel the grease on the fried items. Specific Instructions: Average values Fried chicken: 100 calories and 10 g fat per ounce. Fried hamburger: 100 calories and 10 g fat per ounce. Grilled chicken: 55 calories and 3 g fat per ounce. Cheese on sandwich: 100 calories and 10 g fat per ounce (average) French fries: 125 calories and 5 g fat per ounce. Average mayonnaise on sandwich: 1 tablespoon: 135 calories and 15 g fat per ounce Free toppings: mustard, ketchup, lettuce, tomato, pickles, onions Hamburger bun: two servings starch/bread, 160 calories and 0 to 2 g fat per whole bun Biscuit: average 125 calories and 5 g fat per ounce.
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CLASS DISCUSSION: UNDERSTANDING FIBER Materials needed include the handout Filling up with Fiber (Appendix A3.9), program book [21], samples of foods rich in fiber (Table 20.10), notepad and pen, flip chart, erasable markers, or chalk board. Activity: Review and discuss the role and benefits of fiber. Using the samples, compare the fiber content of various foods. Specific Instructions: Dietary fiber is the part of plant food that humans cannot digest or absorb. The recommended daily intake of fiber for children 3 to 18 years old is the child’s age in years plus 5 g. For adults it is 20 to 30 g per day. There are several benefits to increasing the amount of fiber in your diet. Benefits of Fiber Fiber can draw water into the digestive tract to make stools softer and easier to pass. Dietary fiber reduces the risk of certain digestive diseases, such as diverticulosis, hemorrhoids, and irritable bowel syndrome. This is because fiber increases the rate at which food travels through the digestive tract. Dietary fiber can also help in weight loss. Dietary fiber increases the bulk of a meal and promotes a feeling of fullness in the stomach, which in turn may reduce the amount of food eaten. High-fiber foods generally require more chewing and may take longer to eat. Certain types of dietary fiber lower cholesterol and triglyceride levels in the blood, and dietary fiber may help in the prevention of certain types of cancer. There is evidence that high-fiber foods may help to prevent colon cancer by binding with cancer-causing agents and speeding their progress through the digestive tract. Adding Fiber to Your Diet When you increase the amount of fiber in your diet, you should do so gradually. Your stomach and your intestines need time to get used to this change. Adding fiber too quickly or using too much fiber on a regular basis may cause gas, diarrhea, and bloating. Be sure to drink plenty of water and other liquids as well. Aim for at least 8 glasses of water per day. Assist patients who do not drink water regularly to gradually achieve this goal over several weeks. Table 20.10 details foods that provide fiber and the grams per serving of each.
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TABLE 20.10 Best Fiber Sources — Grams of Fiber Food Breads Whole-wheat, regular, 1 slice Pumpernickel, 1 slice Rye, 1 slice Pita, whole wheat, 1 Whole-wheat, hearty or heavy, 1 slice Legumes Beans, cooked, ½ cup Lentils, cooked, ½ cup
Fiber, g
2–3 2 2 5 4–6
8 4
Cereals and Other Starches Barley, cooked, ½ cup Cereal, bran, ½–1 cup Oatmeal, cooked, ½ cup Popcorn, 1 cup Rice, brown, cooked, ½ cup
3 6–15 2 1 2
Vegetables Asparagus, cooked, ½ cup Broccoli, cooked, ½ cup Brussels sprouts, cooked, ½ cup Cabbage, cooked, ½ cup Carrots, cooked, ½ cup, or raw, 1 medium Cauliflower, cooked, ½ cup Green beans, cooked, ½ cup Potato (with skin), cooked, 1 medium Spinach, cooked, ½ cup
2 2 3 2 3 2 2 4 2
Fruits Apple (with skin), 1 medium Apricots, dried, ⅓ cup Blueberries, 1 cup Banana, 1 medium Figs, dried, 2 Orange, 1 medium Pear (with skin), 1 medium Peach (with skin), 1 medium Prunes, dried, 4 Raisins, ¼ cup Strawberries, 1 cup
3–4 4 4 2 4 3 4 2 2 2 4
REFERENCES 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Pavlov, I. P. Conditioned Reflexes. (G. V. Anrep, Trans.). London, Oxford University Press, 1927. Bandura, A. Principles of Behavior Modification. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1969. Bandura, A. Social Learning Theory. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1977. Bandura, A. Social Foundations of Thought and Action. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1986. Skinner, B. F. The Behavior of Organisms: An Experimental Analysis. Acton, MA: Copley, 1938.
Interdisciplinary, Interactive, Group Instruction 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15.
16.
17. 18.
19.
20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34.
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Skinner, B. F. Science and Human Behavior. New York: Macmillan, 1953. Skinner, B. F. The science of learning and the art of teaching. Harvard Educ Rev. 24:86–97, 1954. Skinner, B. F. The Technology of Teaching. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1968. Piaget, J. The Moral Judgment of the Child. New York: Harcourt, 1932. Piaget, J. Piaget’s theory. In: P. H. Mussen, Ed. Carmichael’s Manual of Child Psychology. New York: Wiley, 1970. Prochaska, J. O., DiClemente, C. C. Stages and processes of self-change of smoking: toward an integrative model of change. J Consult Clin Psychol. 51:390–395, 1983. Prochaska, J. O., DiClemente, C. C., Norcross, J. C. In search of how people change. Applications to addictive behaviors. Am Psychol. 47:1102–1114, 1992. Prochaska, J. O., DiClemente, C.C. The Transtheoretical Approach. New York: Basic Books, 1992, pp. 300–334. Prochaska, J. O., DiClemente, C.C. Stages of Change in the Modification of Problem Behavior. Sycamore: Sycamore Publishing Company, 1992, pp. 184–214. Berg-Smith, S. M., V. J. Stevens, K. M. Brown, L. Van Horn, N. Gernhofer, E. Peters et al. A brief motivational intervention to improve dietary adherence in adolescents. The Dietary Intervention Study in Children (DISC) Research Group. Health Educ. Res. 14:399–410, 1999. Feldman, R. H., Damron, D., Anliker, J., Ballesteros, R. D., Langenberg, P., DiClemente, C., Havas, S. The effect of the Maryland WIC 5-A-Day promotion program on participants’ stages of change for fruit and vegetable consumption. Health Educ. Behav. 27:649–663, 2000. Lee, R. E., Nigg, C. R., DiClemente, C. C., Courneya, K. S. Validating motivational readiness for exercise behavior with adolescents. Res. Q. Exerc. Sport. 72:401–410, 2001. Sothern, M. S., H. Schumacher, T. K. von Almen, L. K. Carlisle, and J. N. Udall. Committed to kids: an integrated, 4-level team approach to weight management in adolescents. J. Am. Diet. Assoc. 102:S81–S85, 2002. von Almen, T. K., Figueroa-Colon, R., Suskind, R. M. Psychological considerations in the treatment of childhood obesity. In: P. L. Giorgi, Suskind, R. M., Catassi, C. Ed., The Obese Child. Basel, Switzerland: Karger Press, 1991, pp. 162–171. von Almen, T. K., Figueroa-Colon, R., Suskind, R.M. Psychological considerations in the treatment of childhood obesity. Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2, 1992. Sothern, M., von Almen, TK, Schumacher, H. Trim Kids: The Proven Plan That Has Helped Thousands of Children Achieve a Healthier Weight. New York: Harper Collins Publishers, 2001 Ewart, C. K. Social action theory for a public health psychology. Am. Psychol. 46:931–946, 1991. Miller, W. R., Rollnick, S. Motivational Interviewing: Preparing People to Change Addictive Behavior. New York: The Guilford Press, 1991. Miller, W. R., Rollnick, S. Motivational Interviewing: Preparing People for Change, 2nd ed. New York: The Guilford Press, 2002. Epstein, L., Masek, B., Marshall, W. A nutritionally based school program for control of eating in obese children. Behav. Ther. 9:766–788, 1978. Stark, L. J., F. L. Collins, Jr., P. G. Osnes, and T. F. Stokes. Using reinforcement and cueing to increase healthy snack food choices in preschoolers. J. Appl. Behav. Anal. 19:367–379, 1986. Epstein, L. H. Adherence to exercise in obese children. J Cardiac Rehab. 4:185–195, 1984. Waxman, M., Stunkard, A. J. Caloric intake and expenditure of obese boys. J. Pediatr. 96:187–193, 1980. Kingsley, R. G., Shapiro, J. A comparison of three behavioral programs for the control of obesity in children. Behav. Ther. 8:30–36, 1977. Epstein, L. H., Wing, R. R., Koeske, R., Andrasik, F., Ossip, D. J. Child and parent weight loss in family-based behavior modification programs. J. Consult. Clin. Psychol. 49:674–685, 1981. Brownell, K. D., Kelman, J. H., Stunkard, A. J. Treatment of obese children with and without their mothers: changes in weight and blood pressure. Pediatrics. 71:515–523, 1983. Kirschenbaum, D. S., Harries, E. S., Tomarken, A. J. Effects of parental involvement in behavior weight loss therapy for preadolescents. Behav. Ther. 15:485–500, 1984. Marlatt, A. G., Gordon, J. R. Relapse Prevention: Maintenance Strategies in the Treatment of Addictive Behaviors. New York: The Guilford Press, 1985. Epstein, L., Wing, R., Penner, B. C. et al. Effect of diet and controlled exercise on weight-loss in obese children. J. Pediatr. 7:358–361, 1985.
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35. Gutin, B., Litaker, M. Islam, S., Manos, T., Smith, C., Treiber, F. Body-composition measurement in 9-11-y-old children by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, skinfold-thickness measurements, and bioimpedance analysis. Am. J. Clin. Nutr. 63:287–292, 1996. 36. Epstein, L. H., Wing, R., Koeske, R., et. al. A comparison of lifestyle exercise, aerobic exercise and calisthenics on weight loss in obese children. Behav. Ther. 15, 1985. 37. Becque, M. D., Katch, V. L., Rocchini, A. P., Marks, C. R., Moorehead, C. Coronary risk incidence of obese adolescents: reduction by exercise plus diet intervention. Pediatrics. 81:605–612, 1988. 38. Brown, R., Sothern, M., Suskind, R., Udall, J., Blecker, U. Racial differences in the lipid profiles of obese children and adolescents before and after significant weight loss. Clin. Pediat. (Phila). 39:427–431, 2000. 39. Sothern, M., Gordon, S. Prevention of obesity in young children. Clin. Pediat. 42:101–111, 2003. 40. Epstein, L. H. Methodological issues and ten-year outcomes for obese children. Ann N Y Acad Sci. 699:237–249, 1993. 41. Epstein, L. H., Valoski, A., Wing, R. R., and McCurley, J. Ten-year follow-up of behavioral, familybased treatment for obese children. JAMA. 264:2519–2523, 1990. 42. Bailey, R., Olson, J., Pepper, S., Porszasz, J., Barstow, T., Cooper, D. The level and tempo of children’s physical activities: an observational study. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 27:1033–1041, 1994. 43. DiNubile, N. A. Youth fitness — problems and solutions. Prev Med. 22:589–594, 1993. 44. Bar-Or, O., Foreyt, J., Bouchard, C. et al. Physical activity, genetic and nutritional considerations in childhood weight management. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 30:2–10, 1998. 45. Bar-Or, O. A., Rowland, W. Pediatric Exercise Medicine: From Physiologic Principles to Health Care Application. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics, 2004 46. Sothern, M. S., Loftin, M., Blecker, U., Udall, Jr., J. N. Impact of significant weight loss on maximal oxygen uptake in obese children and adolescents. J. Investig. Med. 48:411–416, 2000. 47. Epstein, L. H., Goldfield, G. S. Physical activity in the treatment of childhood overweight and obesity: current evidence and research issues. Med. Sci. Sports Exerc. 31:S553–S559, 1999. 48. Sothern, M. S., Loftin, M., Suskind, R. M., Udall, Jr., J. N., Blecker, U. The impact of significant weight loss on resting energy expenditure in obese youth. J. Investig. Med. 47:222–226, 1999. 49. Sothern, M., Udall, Jr., J. N., Suskind, R. M., Vargas, A., Blecker, U. Weight loss and growth velocity in obese children after very low calorie diet, exercise, and behavior modification. Acta Paediatr. 89:1036–1043, 2000. 50. Pollock, M., Glasser, G., Butcher, J., Despres, J., Dishman, R. et al. American College of Sports Medicine Position Stand. The recommended quantity and quality of exercise for developing and maintaining cardiorespiratory and muscular fitness, and flexibility in healthy adults, Med Sci Sports Exerc., 975–991, 1998. 51. Sothern, M. S., Loftin, M., Suskind, R. M., Udall, J. N., Blecker, U. The health benefits of physical activity in children and adolescents: implications for chronic disease prevention. Eur. J. Pediatr. 158:271–274, 1999. 52. Sothern, M. S., Loftin, J. M., Udall, J. N., Suskind, R. M., Ewing, T. L., Tang, S. C., Blecker, U. Safety, feasibility, and efficacy of a resistance training program in preadolescent obese children. Am. J. Med. Sci. 319:370–375, 2000. 53. Hass, C. J., Feigenbaum, M. S., Franklin, B. A. Prescription of resistance training for healthy populations. Sports Med. 31:953–964, 2001. 54. Pescatello, L. S., Franklin, B. A., Fagard, R., Farquhar, W. B., Kelley, G. A., Ray, C. A. American College of Sports Medicine position stand. Exercise and hypertension. Med. Sci. Sports Exerc. 36:533–553, 2004. 55. Stratton, G., Jones, M., Fox, K. R., Tolfrey, K., Harris, J., Maffulli, N. et al. BASES position statement on guidelines for resistance exercise in young people. J. Sports Sci. 22:383–390, 2004. 56. Schwimmer, J. B., Burwinkle, T. M., Varni, J. W. Health-related quality of life of severely obese children and adolescents. JAMA. 289:1813–1819, 2003. 57. Doll, H. A., Petersen, S. E., Stewart-Brown, S. L. Obesity and physical and emotional well-being: associations between body mass index, chronic illness, and the physical and mental components of the SF-36 questionnaire. Obes. Res. 8:160–170, 2000.
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58. Sothern, M., Loftin, M., Suskind, R., Wilson, J., Singley, C., Udall, J., Blecker, U. The impact of level of obesity on physiologic function during rest, submaximal and maximal weight-bearing exercise in obese youth. Obes. Res. 5:35S, 1997. 59. Maffeis, C., Schutz, Y., Schena, F., Zaffanello, M., Pinelli, L. Energy expenditure during walking and running in obese and nonobese prepubertal children. J. Pediatr. 123:193–199, 1993. 60. Sothern, M. S., Loftin, J., Suskind, R. M., Udall, J. N., Blecker, U. Physiologic function and childhood obesity. Int. J. Pediatr. 14:135–139, 1999. 61. Neiman, D. Fitness and Sports Medicine: An Introduction. Palo Alto, CA: Bull Publishing Co., 1990 62. Pollock, S. E. Human responses to chronic illness: physiologic and psychosocial adaptation. Nurs Res. 35:90–95, 1986. 63. Sothern, M. S. Exercise as a modality in the treatment of childhood obesity. Pediatr. Clin. N. Am. 48:995–1015, 2001. 64. Sothern, M. S., Hunter, S., Suskind, R. M., Brown, R., Udall, Jr., J. N., Blecker, U. Motivating the obese child to move: the role of structured exercise in pediatric weight management. South. Med. J. 92:577–584, 1999. 65. Sothern, M. S., Loftin, J. M., Udall, J. N., Suskind, R. M., Ewing, T. L., Tang, S. C., Blecker, U. Inclusion of resistance exercise in a multidisciplinary outpatient treatment program for preadolescent obese children. South. Med. J. 92:585–592, 1999. 66. Bandura, A. Health promotion by social cognitive means. Health Educ. Behav. 31:143–164, 2004. 67. Borg, G. Borg’s Perceived Exertion and Pain Scales. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics, 1998 68. Rippe, J. M., Hess, S. The role of physical activity in the prevention and management of obesity. J. Am. Diet. Assoc. 98:S31–S38, 1998. 69. Sothern, M. S., Despinasse, B., Brown, R., Suskind, R. M., Udall, Jr., J. N., Blecker, U. Lipid profiles of obese children and adolescents before and after significant weight loss: differences according to sex. South. Med. J. 93:278–282, 2000. 70. Metcalf, J. A., Roberts, S. O. Strength training and the immature athlete: an overview. Pediatr. Nurs. 19:325–332, 1993. 71. LeMura, L. M., Maziekas, M. T. Factors that alter body fat, body mass, and fat-free mass in pediatric obesity. Med. Sci. Sports Exerc. 34:487–496, 2002. 72. Epstein, L. H., Klein, K. R., Wisniewski, L.. Child and parent factors that influence psychological problems in obese children. Int. J. Eat. Disord. 15:151–158, 1994. 73. Epstein, L. H., Koeske, R., Wing, R. R., Valoski, A. The effect of family variables on child weight change. Health Psychol. 5:1–11, 1986. 74. Epstein, L. H., Valoski, A., Koeske, R., and Wing, R. R. Family-based behavioral weight control in obese young children. J. Am. Diet. Assoc. 86:481–484, 1986. 75. Epstein, L. H., Wing, R. R., Koeske, R., Valoski, A. Effect of parent weight on weight loss in obese children. J. Consult. Clin. Psychol. 54:400–401, 1986. 76. Batch, J. A., Baur, L. A. Management and prevention of obesity and its complications in children and adolescents. Med. J. Aust. 182:130–135, 2005. 77. Strong, W., Malina, R., Blimkie, C., Daniels, S. et al. Evidence based physical activity for schoolaged youth. J. Pediatr. 146:732–737, 2005.
APPENDIX 1 Clinical Management Forms
Clinical Management Forms
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A1.1 SAMPLE JOB DESCRIPTION — CLINICAL COORDINATOR Position: Clinic Coordinator Terms of Employment: Unlimited Hours of Employment: 20 hours per week, scheduled as necessary Duties and Responsibilities Daily Check voice mail and return phone calls from parents and referring physicians or others; mail out information packets to parents and referring physicians; file patient information as necessary Replace forms in files as necessary Respond to patient/parent concerns and complaints and refer medical concerns to the physician, nutrition concerns to the dieticians, behavior concerns to the psychologists, and exercise concerns to the exercise physiologist; process all registration, insurance, and public relations/marketing items; document all correspondence and information in patient files Weekly Make phone calls to absentees from weekly weight clinic; make notes in patient files and report any special circumstances to medical director Schedule meeting room and set-up Schedule patients for physician office visits or additional medical testing as required Maintain office and clinic supplies, order as necessary Process check requests for supplies as required Process reimbursement for petty cash (anything under $50.00) supplies as required Prepare and distribute flyers concerning class events, free information seminars, orientations Monthly Schedule meeting room for monthly staff meeting, notify staff Take minutes at monthly staff meeting, distribute to staff Update class schedule, prepare flyer, and mail out Prepare monthly attendance report Prepare and distribute monthly staff “special events” calendar Prepare patient birthday list for each month Order clinic supplies as necessary Quarterly Organize free information sessions and orientations: meeting space, supplies, patient contact, patient class schedule, slide presentation, sign-in sheet, display table, hand-outs, registration packets Schedule patients for history and physical exams or refer them to appropriate physician office Mail packets with copies of progress to referring physicians as per procedure guide Calculate obesity status [1,2] and assign patients to phase I, II, or III as per procedure guide Prepare orientation packets including consent forms Prepare patient files with all necessary forms as per procedure guide and sample file Mail out test preparation letters 2 weeks before evaluation date as per procedure guide Make reminder phone calls for blood tests, evaluation reminders, and body composition tests Prepare awards for graduating from one phase to another — for activity, attendance, and weight loss — as per procedure guide
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Ongoing Typeset memos, letters, copies, faxes, phone calls, and so on as necessary for good communication among and between staff physicians and parents Keep up clinical records and files Prepare, order, or purchase incentive awards as necessary Perform quality control for patient files Arrange pre-/postpicture film developing, photo book organization Keep up program calendar
Clinical Management Forms
A1.2
275
PEDIATRIC WEIGHT MANAGEMENT CLASS SCHEDULE FORM Medicine 4:00–4:30
Nutrition
Behavior
Exercise
Set-up
Set-up
Set-up
Set-up
Accomplishments
Accomplishments
Accomplishments
Accomplishments
Clean up
Clean up
Clean up
Clean up
4:30–4:50 4:50–5:00 5:00–5:30 5:30–6:00 6:00–6:30 6:30–7:00
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PHONE SCREENING AND INFORMATION FORM
Initials:
▫ Self-pay or Insurance
▫ Medicaid Phone Screening and Information Form
Date:
Time:
▫ M
Patient Name: /
▫ F
Age:
DOB:
/
Height:________________________________________ (approximate, feet/inches)
Weight: _______________________________________ (approximate, pounds)
Mother:
Father:
Address: Telephone (Home):
Telephone (Work):
Price Quoted: Additional Comments:
Mailing Checklist ▫ Local Area ▫ Out of State ▫ Brochure ▫ Referral Form
▫ ▫ ▫ ▫
Out of Town Information Letter Business Card Registration Form
Clinical Management Forms
A1.4
277
PHYSICIAN REFERRAL FORM
Pediatric Weight Management Program
Date: ______________________ Appointment Date and Time: __________________________________________ Patient’s Name: ________________________________ Date of Birth: _____________________
▫ Male
Physician: ______________________________________
▫ Female
Parent’s Names: _________________________________________________________________________________ Address: _______________________________________________ Home Phone#:__________________________ _______________________________________________________ Work Phone#: _________________________ _______________________________________________________ Other Phone#: __________________________ Medical History Past Medical History: _____________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________________________ Recent Medical History:___________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________________________ Primary Physician: _______________________________________________________________________________ Referring Physician: ______________________________________________________________________________ Address: _______________________________________________ Phone#: _______________________________ _______________________________________________________ Other Phone#: __________________________ Billing Information
▫ Private Insurance: ______________________________________________________________________________ ▫ HMO: _______________________________________________________________________________________ ▫ CHAMPUS
▫ Payment at Service
▫ Accept Insurance Only
▫ Medicaid
▫ Payment Plan: ___________________________________________ ▫ No Coverage
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A1.5 REGISTRATION FORM Weight-Management Program Registration Form Patient Information
Emergency Contact
Last Name: _______________________ Sex: ▫ M ▫ F
Please give the name of a relative or friend who does not live with you, who can be contacted in case of an emergency:
First Name:______________ Date of Birth: ________ Middle Name: ___________ Religion: ____________ Street Address: _________________________________ City:__________________State:____ZIP Code _______ Soc.Sec.#:_____________________________________ Home Phone: (_____) ___________________________ Patient Admitted Before:
▫ Yes
▫ No
Name: _______________________________________ Relationship to Child: ___________________________ Street Address: ________________________________ City:__________________State:____ZIP Code ______ Phone: (_____) ________________________________
Father’s Information
Insurance Information
Last Name: ____________________________________
Insurance Company: ____________________________
First Name:_________________Middle: ____________
Phone # to verify Ins. Coverage: __________________
Street Address: _________________________________
Policy #: _____________________________________
City:__________________State:____ZIP Code _______
Does your insurance need to be pre-certified? ▫ Yes ▫ No
Home Phone: (_____) ___________________________
Name of Insured: ______________________________
Soc.Sec.#:_____________________________________
SECOND POLICY
Date of Birth: __________________________________
Insurance Company: ____________________________
Marital Status: ▫ single ▫ married ▫ divorced ▫ widowed
Phone # to verify Ins. Coverage: __________________
Occupation:_______________Employer: ____________
Policy #: _____________________________________
Work Address: _________________________________
Does your insurance need to be pre-certified? ▫ Yes ▫ No
City:__________________State:____ZIP Code _______
Name of Insured: ______________________________
Work Phone: (______)___________________________ Mother’s Information
Other Information
Last Name: ____________________________________
MEDICAID: Please present Medicaid Card
First Name:_________________Middle: ____________
Medicaid #: ___________________________________
Street Address: _________________________________
County:_____________Name of Worker: ___________
City:__________________State:____ZIP Code _______
Handicapped Children’s Program: ▫ Yes ▫ No
Home Phone: (_____) ___________________________
County:______________Name of Worker: __________
Soc.Sec.#:_____________________________________
REFERRAL INFORMATION
Date of Birth: __________________________________
Who is the child’s pediatrician? ___________________
Marital Status: ▫ single ▫ married ▫ divorced ▫ widowed
Who referred you to this program? ________________
Occupation:_______________Employer: ____________
Physician’s Name:______________________________
Work Address: _________________________________
Health-Care Facility:____________________________
City:__________________State:____ZIP Code _______ Work Phone: (______)___________________________ Person Responsible for Bill
Office Use Only
Name: ________________________________________
Medical Record#:___________Account#: ___________
Street Address: _________________________________
Doctor:___________________Service: _____________
City:__________________State:____ZIP Code _______
Date:__________________Time:__________________
Relationship to Child: ___________________________
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A1.6 Medical History and Physical Examination Form Historical Data A. Health History 1. Participant 2. Family Birth Weight________________________Age at obesity ________________________________________________ Family members who are overweight ________________________________________________________________ List attempts at weight reduction____________________________________________________________________ List any present or past serious illness _______________________________________________________________ List any hospitalization____________________________________________________________________________ Gynecological History/Sexual History 1. Menarche 2. Last menstrual period 3. Breast development
Yes________ No________
Age of onset
________Yrs.
Pubic hair
Yes________ No________
Age of onset
________Yrs.
Birth control
Yes________ No________
Birth control method ___________________________________________________________________________ Medications: Yes, Describe_____________________________________________________________________ No________ Nonprescription Drugs:
Yes, Name and/or describe _________________________________________________ No________
Allergy:
Yes________ No________
Food:____________________________________________________________________________________ Medications: ______________________________________________________________________________ Other: ___________________________________________________________________________________ B. Dietary History 1. Participant 2. Family Problem foods: __________________________________________________________________________________ Problem places: Relative’s homes__________________ Friends__________________ Television ______________ Dietary History: Food preparation: ___% Fried ___% Broiled ___% Boiled ___% Baked ___% Grilled ___% Other List the common meats eaten in your family __________________________________________________________ Indicate with or without skin _______________________________________________________________________ Types of fat-cooking:
Vegetable oil_______ Margarine_______ Butter_______ Lard_______ Other_______
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C. Physical Athletic History 1. Participant 2. Family Athletic activities: None_______ Walk_______ Ride bike_______ Skating (Ice and/or roller) _______ Swim _______ Run _______ Jump Rope_______ Dance_______ Other_______ The amount of time each session:
3 times/week_____ 2 times/week_____ Other_____ >20 min_____ <20 min_____
D. Psychosocial History 1. Participant 2. Family Do friends make fun of your obesity?
Yes________ No________
Why do you want to lose weight? ___________________________________________________________________ What do you plan to gain by losing weight?___________________________________________________________ Social Habits: Smoking or tobacco:
Yes________ No________
How many pack(s) per day?________ Drinking:
Yes________ No________ How long?________
Which type:
Beer________ Wine________ Liquor________
Physical Examination Form Physical Examination General appearance
Skin, hair, nails
Lymph nodes
Head, face, ears, eyes, nose, throat, mouth
Neck
Chest, breast, lungs Tanner stage:
Heart
← WNL←
↑ PF↑
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Abdomen
Genitalia, anus, rectum Tanner stage:
Extremities — appearance (if abnormal, describe finding or identify as listed below):
Varus (bowlegged)
Valgus (knock knee)
“Flat” foot
Rotation
Hip
Knee
Ankle
Gait
Additional description of positive findings:
Temperature ___________ Pulse ___________ Respirations ___________ BP___________ Weight___________ Height___________ Note: ←WNL = within normal limits
↑PF = positive finding
Signature _______________________________________________________________________________________ Review of Systems Date: _____________ Name:_______________________________________________________________________ HEENT ________________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________________________
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Cardiopulmonary ________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________________________ Gastrointestinal __________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________________________ Genitourinary ___________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________________________ Neurological ____________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________________________ Other __________________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________________________
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A1.7 CLEARANCE FORM ______________ has met the medical requirements of screening to enter the weight reduction program. ______________ has not met the medical requirements of screening to enter the weight reduction program. Labs Pending _________________ No Labs Pending ______________ Referrals Pulmonary _______________________________________________________________ Endocrinology____________________________________________________________ Orthopedics ______________________________________________________________ Others __________________________________________________________________ Follow-up visit recommended 10 weeks _____________________ 3 months _____________________ 6 months _____________________ 1 year
_____________________
Other
_____________________
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A1.8 PROGRAM INFORMATION LETTER Pediatric Weight Management Thank you for your interest in Pediatric Weight Management Program. A new session of will begin in . In the last 10 years, the program has assisted many children to reach their individual weight loss goals. The comprehensive program includes • Weekly consultations with a registered dietitian, clinical exercise physiologist, and behavioral modification specialist • Medical supervision by a pediatrician • Educational tools including exercise/motivational videos and colorful and fun workbooks and handbooks • Comprehensive health and fitness evaluations every 3 months • Achievement certificates, awards, diet/exercise record books, and a backpack • Lipid profile and chemical blood analysis • Graded exercise test including metabolic analysis • Body composition analysis by DEXA, including percentage fat, lean body mass, and bone mineral density Parents, please follow these easy registration steps: STEP 1 Your child must have a completed medical history and physical examination to enroll in the program. Make an appointment with your child’s primary care physician for a history and physical examination and provide the name, address, and telephone number of your physician so we can mail the appropriate forms to his or her office. If you do not have a primary care physician, you can make an appointment with our medical director to obtain a medical history and physical by calling . Following the exam, a recommended “term of treatment” will be determined by the medical director. STEP 2
Attend the free information session on from until at the .
STEP 3
Register for the next session by returning the enclosed registration form and fee in the self-addressed envelope.
STEP 4 Attend the orientation session after receiving clearance from the medical director. You and your child are now on your way to a healthier and happier life. All children are required to take an exercise test before the start of the session. If your child has not been tested or scheduled, please call the program secretary at after completing the medical history and physical to schedule an appointment. Exercise testing is done only on between at the (MAP INCLUDED IN PACKET). One week after the orientation meeting, regular classes will begin. Classes will be held on evenings from until . We require at least one parent to attend these sessions with the child. Weekly attendance is essential to the success of your child’s weight loss. The cost of the program is listed below. Registration: • Participants are required to pay a registration fee, which is due before any testing or classes. This fee includes the cost of the initial screening and health assessment. Program materials: • A fee for educational materials is due at the orientation meeting. Payment schedule: • per class attended is billed monthly to the patient thereafter. Each quarter the patient will participate in a progress screening and health assessment; if the patient does not attend at least 10 of 12 classes, he or she will be billed for this assessment. Rebate: • The patient will receive a rebate if he or she attends 48 classes during the 1-year period. Also, if he or she attends the 1-year progress screen and health assessment, a rebate will be given.
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Total cost: • The total cost of the pediatric weight management program will be per year of treatment. Patients receive a 20% discount if the full fee is paid in advance. Payment options: • Visa and Master Card are accepted. Monthly cash/check payment plans are available but must be approved before program participation. For your convenience, we also have an agreement with Loan by phone (1-800). This option is available pending credit approval. If there are any questions that have not been covered here, please call. We hope to see you and your child this next session. Thanks!
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A1.9 INITIAL PARENT QUESTIONNAIRE Child’s Name _________________________________________________ Date ________________________________ Address _____________________________________________________ Telephone ____________________________ Parents’ Names __________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________ General 1. Why do you want your child to lose weight at this time? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 2. Name and address of child’s physician __________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3. Please describe your child’s weight during the past 6 months:
▫ It has decreased. ▫ It has been the same. ▫ It has increased. 4. Please describe previous attempts your child has made to lose weight, including at what age: Age
Weight lost
How long weight loss maintained
Weight-loss method
5. Why do you think your child is overweight? (Check all reasons that apply.)
▫ Overeats at meals ▫ Snacks ▫ Low activity level Weight and Medical History 6. Birth weight ______________________________ Age at onset of obesity __________________________________ 7. ▫ Breast-fed
or
▫ bottle-fed
Infant feeding problems: __________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 8. Overweight from 2 years of age 9. Teased by other children because of weight
▫ Yes ▫ No ▫ Yes ▫ No
10. Previous medical problems: __________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 11. Hospitalizations: __________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________
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12. Medications: __________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________ Family Medical and Weight History 13. Grandparents’ weights: Maternal Grandmother _________________ Maternal Grandfather _______________ Paternal Grandmother _________________ Paternal Grandfather _________________ 14. Parents’ weights: Mother ________________________ Father _________________________________ 15. Siblings’ weights: Sisters __________________________ Brothers ________________________ 16. Aunts: Number overweight _____ 17. Uncles: Number overweight _____ Medical: 18. Mother: Other health problems (describe) __________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 19. Father: Other health problems (describe) __________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 20. Has anyone in your family had diabetes, hypertension, or thyroid disease? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________ Social History 21. In what grade is your child? ______ Name of school____________________________________________________ 22. Does your child like school? 23. Does your child have friends at school?
▫ Yes ▫ No ▫ Yes ▫ No
24. What are your child’s school grades? ▫ Above average (As and Bs) ▫ Average (Cs) ▫ Below average (Ds and Fs) 25. Your child’s favorite subjects: __________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 26. How does your child spend most of his or her free time? ▫ TV ▫ With friends ▫ Phone ▫ Other 27. Does your child have friends in the neighborhood?
▫ Yes ▫ No
28. Please describe any difficulties you have in managing your child at home: __________________________________________________________________________________________________
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29. What are the attitudes of the following people about your child’s weight? Disapprove (child’s fault)
Indifferent (doesn’t care)
Sympathetic (wants to help)
Father Mother Siblings Friends 30. How does your child get along with you?
▫ Good ▫ Average ▫ Poor 31. How does your child get along with your spouse?
▫ Good ▫ Average ▫ Poor 32. How does your child get along with his or her siblings?
▫ Good ▫ Average ▫ Poor 33. How do you get along with your spouse?
▫ Good ▫ Average ▫ Poor 34. Do you encourage your child to be
▫ Active ▫ Inactive 35. Has your child ever received psychological or other counseling in the past?
▫ Yes ▫ No
If your child has received counseling, specify what kind, length of treatment, and place, and give a brief description of the results: __________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 36. How does your child feel about himself (self-image)?
▫ Relatively happy, except for weight ▫ Fair ▫ Dislikes self intensely, including other aspects in addition to weight Eating Habits 37. Is your child a compulsive eater?
▫ Yes ▫ No 38. Does your child eat in binges?
▫ Yes ▫ No ▫ Sometimes 39. Does your child hide food?
▫ Yes ▫ No ▫ Sometimes 40. Does your child eat when depressed or anxious?
▫ Yes ▫ No ▫ Sometimes 41. Does your child crave sweets?
▫ Yes ▫ No ▫ Sometimes 42. Does your child eat food as a reward?
▫ Yes ▫ No ▫ Sometimes 43. Does your child eat food as a punishment?
▫ Yes ▫ No ▫ Sometimes 44. Does your child eat at regular times?
▫ Yes ▫ No ▫ Sometimes
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45. Eating patterns: Times per week meal is eaten: Breakfast
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Lunch
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Dinner
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
46. Does your child eat second helpings?
▫ Yes ▫ No ▫ Sometimes 47. Snacking patterns: Times per week: Mid-morning
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
After school
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
After dinner
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
48. Types of snacks:
▫ ▫ ▫ ▫ ▫
Chips Cakes, cookies Pickles Candy
▫ ▫ ▫ ▫
Frozen dessert Leftovers Fruit Sandwiches
Other: _______________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 49. Does your child eat dessert?
▫ Usually ▫ Occasionally ▫ Seldom 50. What size portions does your child eat?
▫ Small ▫ Medium ▫ Large 51. How fast does your child eat?
▫ Slowly ▫ Average ▫ Quickly 52. What beverages does your child drink? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 53. What are your child’s favorite foods? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 54. Which foods does your child dislike? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 55. Are there any problem foods? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 56. What time of the day is a problem for your child overeating? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 57. Does your child eat too many starches?
▫ Yes ▫ No ▫ Sometimes 58. Does your child eat too much meat and fat?
▫ Yes ▫ No ▫ Sometimes
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59. What about the eating habits of other family members? Mother: __________________________________________________________________________________________________ Father: __________________________________________________________________________________________________ Siblings: __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 60. Does your child take any vitamin or mineral supplements?
▫ Yes ▫ No
Kind ________________________________________________________________________________
61. What is the motivation to lose weight? Child: __________________________________________________________________________________________________ Siblings: __________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mother: __________________________________________________________________________________________________ Father: __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 62. Does your child eat any foods (such as cakes, pies, ice cream) directly from the package?
▫ Yes ▫ No ▫ Sometimes 63. Does your child usually clean the plate?
▫ Yes ▫ No ▫ Sometimes 64. When your child finishes the food on the plate and there is more food available on the table, what does he or she usually do?
▫ Does not take any more ▫ Takes a little more ▫ Takes a lot more 65. When is your child most likely to overeat? (Check all that apply.)
▫ ▫ ▫ ▫ ▫
When he/she serves him/herself When food is served by others When parents or family urge him/her to eat more When friends urge him/her to eat more When others (not family) are present
66. When is your child more likely to eat more food than usual?
▫ When eating alone ▫ When eating in a group 67. Does your child eat more food on certain days of the week?
▫ Eats more on the weekends ▫ Eats more on the weekdays ▫ No difference between the weekends and weekdays Exercise Habits 68. Does your child have a physical education class at school?
▫ Yes ▫ No
Times per week _______________________________________________________________________
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69. Does your child participate in extra athletic activities?
▫ Yes ▫ No
Kind ________________________________________________________________________________
70. Does your child participate in home exercise activities? Activity
Times per week
71. Does your child watch television excessively or engage in other sedentary activities?
▫ Yes ▫ No
Estimated percent of free time____________________________________________________________
72. What is your child’s attitude about exercise?
▫ Positive ▫ Negative ▫ Moderate Family Exercise Activities 73. Is father
▫ Active ▫ Inactive
Activities: _________________________________________________________________________
74. Is mother
▫ Active ▫ Inactive
Activities: _________________________________________________________________________
75. Are siblings
▫ Active ▫ Inactive
Activities: _________________________________________________________________________
Activity Patterns 76. How many hours per day does your child perform the following activities? Watching television
hours
Playing actively (e.g., running, jumping)
hours
Playing quietly
hours
Completing homework
hours
Sleeping
hours
77. What does your child do for physical exercise, and how often does he or she do it? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________
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A1.10 FOR BODY MASS INDEX (BMI) AND CDC PERCENTILES http://www.cdc.gov/growthcharts/
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A1.11 ORIENTATION HANDOUT Pediatric Weight-Management Clinic Dear Parents, Welcome! You’ve just taken an important step toward helping your child to become healthier and happier. These are some commonly asked questions and concerns about our program: 1. What Can I Expect from the Program? Patient Care: You can expect the highest quality in pediatric health care from our staff of medical, nutrition, behavior, and exercise specialists. The program is an individualized approach to prevention and treatment of obesity conducted in a group setting. Our main goal is the improvement of your child’s physical and emotional health and well-being. Weight loss is just a by-product of the overall focus of the program, which is to assist you and your family in making healthy lifestyle changes. A healthy lifestyle will promote maintenance of appropriate body weight and long-term success. Education and Guidance: During the initial weeks of the program you can expect to see all three instructors and the physician weekly. Likewise, all four topics (Medicine, Nutrition, Behavior Modification, and Exercise) will be presented each week. This is a very intense phase, with a great deal of emphasis on diet and changing activity patterns. Reinforcement and Maintenance: During the long-term phase of the program you and your child will join other families who have been in the program previously. Some children will continue to lose weight during this phase and some will only be concerned with maintenance of weight loss. This depends on your child’s level of obesity at the beginning of the program. You can expect to see one to two instructors each week. The topics will alternate and will serve as reinforcement (gentle reminders) of material covered in the first few weeks. This is the most important phase of the program, where either longterm success or relapse (weight regain) occurs. Evaluation and Success: Approximately every 3 months we reevaluate your child to account for normal growth and development. Your child receives a new goal weight and we make careful note of his or her progress. We strongly suggest that even after the program is completed, patients continue to attend at least two or three of these evaluations each year. There is no additional charge for this service. Promptness: You can expect that service will begin promptly at with weigh-in; also that classes will end between and each week. You can expect that at least minutes of exercise of varying types will be available each week, weather and room availability permitting. 2. What Is Expected from My Family and Me? Attendance: Weekly attendance is absolutely essential to success in the first few weeks of the program. Thereafter, although we strongly encourage weekly attendance, individual families usually decide what is the best situation for their own needs. Some children will need weekly check-ins; others will do just fine attending every 2 to 3 weeks. Remember: We have found that attendance corresponds highly with long-term success. Accurate Record Keeping: You and you child are expected to keep certain records. Your child will be rewarded with stickers and positive attention when he or she turns in completed records each week. You should assist your child in keeping these records accurately. Compliance: The program works only if you follow the plan carefully. Weight loss varies, depending upon how overweight your child is at the beginning. We know that if your child is not losing weight, then he or she is not following the plan. Parent and Family Support and Participation: This is absolutely essential! At least one parent must attend clinic sessions weekly with the child. The more the merrier: siblings and extended family are also encouraged to attend. Parents, as well as children, should come dressed to participate in exercise activities each week. We strongly discourage parents from just observing their children exercise and not joining in on the fun! 3. Just What Exactly Does My Fee Cover? The breakdown of charges is: • Medical history and physical • Lab work × 3 (CBC w/dif, SMA20, and lipid profile) • Nutritional Instruction, Behavior Counseling, and Exercise Prescription (50 classes, 4 evaluations) The majority of the expense to administer this program to your child accrues in the first 3 months. Therefore, please note that your responsibility for payment will not be dismissed if you discontinue the program prematurely.
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4. Why Does This Program Work, Where Others Fail? We like to say it is because of something we call the A-Factor: • Availability of highly qualified staff of experts — This is not just a job to us: we are deeply concerned with your child’s progress, health, and overall emotional well-being. We are the A-Team, so to speak. • Accountability to the program staff — Each week you and your child report your progress and are responsible for remaining within the designated program guidelines. The staff checks the weight, medical, nutrition, and exercise records each week. This greatly improves program compliance and success. • Attention — the positive kind only — If your child does well he or she receives tons of positive reinforcement. If not, we encourage your child to try harder next week — but attention is quickly focused to another area of the program. 5. If I Am Having Individual Problems with the Program, What Do I Do? Call the office, and leave a message for one of the three staff members. If it is a medical problem, ask the secretary to contact the pediatrician; if it is a question about the diet or nutrition, ask for the dietitian; if it is exercise related, ask for the exercise physiologist; and if it concerns behavioral problems, ask for the behavior specialist. If you have a general concern about the program, such as insurance, financial, or time conflicts, speak to the weight-management program secretary.
Philosophy The founders of the are primarily concerned with the prevention and treatment of pediatric obesity. We believe that aggressive treatment accompanied by long-term educational follow-up is the most effective approach to this goal. In our clinics the intervention is closely supervised, and the child receives uncompromising care of the highest quality from the pediatric, behavior, exercise, and nutrition specialists. We use an individual approach in a group setting. The immediate goal is the improvement of the child’s physical and emotional well-being. Weight loss and weight maintenance are the attractive side-effects of the overall lifestyle focus of the .
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A1.12 ORIENTATION CHECKLIST Pediatric Weight-Management Program Orientation Checklist Don’t forget to Hand out patient materials Instruct participants on how to fill in food diaries Hand out meeting schedule Hand out test preparation letters Hand out laboratory testing forms Other: __________________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________________________
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A1.13 CLASS SCHEDULE: PEDIATRIC WEIGHT MANAGEMENT Week 0 0 1
2 3
Day
Date
Time 6:00 PM 6:00–7:00 4:30–5:30 5:30–6:20 6:20–6:30 4:30–5:30 5:30–6:30 4:30–5:20 5:20–5:50 5:50–6:30
PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM
4
4:30–5:20 PM 5:20–5:50 PM 5:50–6:30 PM
5
4:30–5:20 5:20–6:30 4:30–5:20 5:20–5:50 5:50–6:30
PM PM PM PM PM
4:30–6:00 6:00–6:30 4:30–5:20 5:20–5:50 5:50–6:30
PM PM PM PM
6
7 8
9
4:30–5:20 PM 5:20–5:50 PM
10
5:50–6:30 6:30–7:30 4:30–5:15 5:30–6:00 6:00–6:30
PM PM PM PM PM
11 12
4:30–6:30 PM 4:30–6:30 PM
Activity
Location
Free info session Orientation Group discussion Nutrition Session Exercise Group discussion Aerobic Class Group Discussion Exercise Behavior Nutrition Group Discussion Exercise Behavior Nutrition Group Discussion Individual Consultations Group Discussion Exercise Behavior Nutrition Park Day Weigh-in/monitor Group Discussion Exercise Behavior Nutrition Group Discussion Behavior Nutrition Exercise Free Info Session Water Exercise Group Discussion Behavior Nutrition Evaluations Awards
Auditorium Classroom Classroom Kitchen Classroom Classroom Auditorium Classroom Cardiac Rehab CTR. Classroom Kitchen Classroom Strength rehab Classroom Kitchen Classroom Classroom Classroom Stretch rehab Classroom Kitchen Off-site Classroom Classroom Cardiac Rehab CTR. Classroom Kitchen Classroom Classroom Kitchen Outdoors Auditorium Pool Classroom Classroom Kitchen Clinic Classroom
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A1.14 WEEKLY CLINIC CHECKLIST Don’t forget to Check and collect food diaries Check and collect exercise cards Collect goal sheets Fill in symptom sheets Hand out stickers, awards, or incentives Hand out exercise DVDs (Class 1) and exercise bands (Dyna-Bands™) (Class 4) Check attendance and forward to coordinator for reminder phone calls Other __________________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________________________
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A1.15 WEIGHT RECORD AND VITAL SIGNS Patient Name: Date
Week
* Resting heart rate
Height (cm)
Weight (kg)
Weight (lbs)
Weekly Loss/Gain
Loss to Date
BP
RHR*
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A1.16 TEST PREPARATION LETTER Dear Parent, Your child is required to have a blood test prior to____________________. He/she will not be allowed to begin the program until this test has been completed. The laboratory is located at______________________________________________________________________________ . Their hours of operation are ___________________________________ . To make an appointment call __________________________________ . Instructions prior to test: Fasting is required (no food) 12 hours beforehand. We suggest scheduling an early morning appointment so that the fasting may be done overnight. Drinking water is fine. Should you have any further questions regarding this test please contact the weight management program office at _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ . Thank You. Sincerely, Program Director
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A1.17 EVALUATION CHECKLIST Patient name: _______________________________________________________________________________________ Date:_____________________________ Measurements
▫ ▫ ▫ ▫ ▫ ▫ ▫
Height Weight Blood pressure Resting heart rate Bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) Skinfolds Circumferences
▫ Photograph ▫ Questionnaires and forms ▫ Physical activity record Psychosocial questionnaires
▫ Child ▫ Parent ▫ Laboratory forms (blood work: baseline, 10 weeks, 1 year) ▫ Consent form
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A1.18 EVALUATION STATION CHECKLIST 1. Behavior Specialist — Patient check-in/check-out, psychosocial questionnaires 2. Physician or Nurse — Weight, height, blood pressure, resting heart rate 3. Exercise Physiologist — Bioelectric impedance analyzer 4. Dietitian — Skinfold measurement, circumferences, growth chart, goal weight review 5. Physician — Answer questions before patients and parents leave
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A1.19 EVALUATION FORM: PEDIATRIC WEIGHT MANAGEMENT PROGRAM Location:
____________________________________________________________ Weight Management Quarterly Evaluation Form
Name
Sex
DOB
Date of exam
Group
Race
Age
Visit
Measure
1
2
3
Average
Examiner
Weight (kg) Height (cm) Body mass index
%
Level of obesity
Midarm circumference (cm) Waist circumference (cm) Hip circumference (cm) Midthigh circumference (mm) Triceps circumference (mm) Subscapular circumference (mm) Medial calf circumference (mm) Head circumference (cm) BIA resistance
Resting heart rate (bpm)
Blood pressure (mmHg) Number of classes attended
Number of classes conducted
Picture (circle one)
Yes
No
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A1.20 EVALUATION RESULTS FORM Pediatric Weight Management Program Evaluation Results Name:_____________________________________________
Age:____________________________________
Today’s Date:_______________________________________
Level:___________________________________
Group:_____________________________ Your child’s weight is ___________ lbs. Your child’s height is ________ ft. ________ in. Your child’s Body Mass Index is __________. This value is based on the Pediatric Growth Charts. Your child is in level _________ of the program. Based on your child’s present height, his/her goal weight is ________. This value will increase as your child grows. Your child is made up of a range of _____ to _____% body fat. The healthy range for girls ages 7 to 17 is 20–25%, and for boys it is 12–18%. The upper range is based on a measure called BIA, which stands for Bioelectrical Impedence Analysis. The BIA is a machine that predicts fat percentages by using a very low electrical current. The lower range is based on a measure of skinfolds, or fat right under the skin. This means that your child has _____lbs of fat and ____ lbs of muscle, bone, and water combined. Your child’s cholesterol level is ________. The healthy level for children is <170. Your child’s triglyceride level is ________. The healthy triglyceride range for children 7 to 17 years is 10–140. Your child’s LDL (the “bad” cholesterol — Low Density Lipoprotein) is ________. The healthy range for children ages 7 to 17 is <110. Your child’s HDL (the “good” cholesterol — High Density Lipoprotein) is ________. The HDL healthy range for children ages 7 to 17 is >35. Your child’s circumference measurements are_______ in. (waist) and_______ in. (hips).
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A1.21 FITNESS EVALUATION Exercise/Fitness Evaluation Date: _______________________ Name: ____________________________________________ DOB:
Age:
Sex:
Group:
Site:
Tested by:
Cardiorespiratory Condition Resting Heart Rate
Resting Blood Pressure
(RHR, bpm):
(RBP, mm Hg):
Tanner Stage:
Maximum Estimated Heart Rate (HR, bpm: 220 – age): Target Heart Rate (THR): 220 – age(_____) RHR(_____) × (_____) – % + RHR(_____) = *Levels I, II, III = 55, 60, or 65%; Level IV = 65, 70, or 75% Aerobic Capacity Seat height:
Predicted max heart rate (bpm):
80% predicted max HR (bpm):
Seconds, 30 beats:
Workloads
Heart Rates
1st workload:
2nd min:
kg watts 2nd workload:
3rd min: 4th min: 2nd min:
kg
3rd min:
watts
4th min:
3rd workload:
2nd min:
kg
3rd min:
watts
4th min:
4th workload:
2nd min:
kg
3rd min:
watts
4th min:
Activity code:
Estimated VO2:
Sub max VO2:
Flexibility Muscular
Strength and Endurance
Trunk flexion:
Overhead press:
in
lb
cm
reps
Clinical Management Forms
Refer to FLEX CHECK results
305
Bench press: lb reps Leg extension: lb reps Body Composition
Weight (kg):
Height (cm):
Body mass index:
Percentage fat:
Fat body weight:
Goal weight:
Lean body weight:
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A1.22 QUARTERLY EVALUATION RESULTS FORM: PEDIATRIC WEIGHT MANAGEMENT PROGRAM Quarterly Evaluation Results Name:
Age:
Today’s Date:
Level:
Group:
Quarterly evaluation:
3 months ago…
now…
Your child’s weight was _______lbs.
Your child’s weight is now ______lbs. Your child lost ______lbs. in the last ___ months!
Your child’s height was ____ft. ____in.
Your child’s height is now ____ft.____in. Your child grew ____in. in the last ___ months!
Your child’s body mass index was ______.
Your child’s body mass index is now ______.
Your child was in level ____, the ____color.
Your child graduated to level ____, the ____ color.
Based on your child’s past height, his/her goal weight was ______lbs.
Your child’s new goal weight is _____lbs. This will increase as your child grows.
Your child’s percentage body fat range was ___–___%. The upper range is based on a measure called BIA, which stands for Bioelectrical Impedence Analysis. The lower range is based on a measure of skinfolds, or fat right under the skin.
Your child’s % body fat range is ____–____%. Your child reduced percentage body fat by ____%.
Based on the BIA measure, your child had _____lbs of fat, and _____lbs of muscle, bone, and water.
Your child has _____lbs of fat, and _____lbs of muscle, bone, and water. He/she lost ____lbs of fat.
Your child’s cholesterol level was ____.
Your child’s cholesterol level is _____. The normal level for children is <170.
Your child’s cholesterol level was ____.
Your child’s triglyceride level is _____. The normal range for children 7 to 17 is 10–40.
Your child’s LDL level was ______. This is the “bad” cholesterol! (Low-Density Lipoprotein)
Your child’s LDL level is _____. The normal range for children 7 to 17 is <110.
Your child’s HDL level was ______. This is the “good” cholesterol! (High-Density Lipoprotein)
Your child’s HDL level is ______. The normal range for children 7 to 17 years of age is >35.
Your child’s waist and hip measures were ______in. (waist) ______in. (hip)
Your child’s waist and hip measure are ______in. (waist) ______in. (hip) He/she lost ___in. in the waist and ___in. in the hip.
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A1.23 SAMPLE SPREADSHEET
Name
Age
Sex
Date of Birth
Weight
Height
Body Mass Index
Body Mass Index Percentile
Level of Obesity
Midarm Circumference (cm)
Waist Circumference (cm)
Hip Circumference (cm)
Midthigh (mm)
Medial Calf (mm)
Head (cm)
Triceps (mm)
Subscapular (mm)
Skinfold Percentage Fat
BIA Percentage Fat
Blood Pressure (mmHg)
Resting Heart Rate (bpm)
APPENDIX 2 Testing/Measurement Protocols
Testing/Measurement Protocols
311
A2.1 MEASUREMENTS A2.1.1 HEIGHT MEASUREMENT A calibrated Dyfed stadiometer (e.g., Holtain Ltd., U.K.) should be used to obtain the height in centimeters of each patient. The patient will remove his or her shoes and step onto the floor platform facing in an outward direction with the heels together. The scapula and buttocks will remain in contact with the back of the stadiometer during the measure. The head will be positioned in a horizontal plane. The clinician will move the headboard onto the most superior aspect of the study participant’s head. This procedure will be repeated two additional times. The average height to the nearest tenth of a centimeter (0.1 cm) should be calculated on a data statistical form.
A2.1.2 MEASUREMENT
OF
WEIGHT
An electronically calibrated scale (e.g., Indiana Scales, Terre Haute, IN) should be used to obtain the weight in kilograms of each patient. The patient will remove his or her shoes and step on the scale. The patient will remain as still as possible. The patient’s weight in kilograms will be recorded once the digital reading is constant. The patient will remain on the scale until the weight is recorded. The process will be repeated two additional times. The average weight in kilograms of each measure will be calculated and recorded on the data statistical form.
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ARKANSAS CLINICIAN’S GUIDE TO WEIGHT PROBLEMS IN CHILDREN AND ADOLESCENTS Step 1: Calculate BMI BMI is the relationship of weight to height.
BMI =
OR
weight (kg) height (m) x height (m)
weight (lb) x 703 height (in) x height (in)
For example, Gary’s BMI = his weight (37 pounds) x 703 divided by his height (41 in) squared or 37 x 703/1681. Gary’s BMI is 15.5
Step 2: Calculate BMI Percentile To be sensitive to the issue of a child’s self-esteem, the term obesity is no longer used. Remember that the BMI is only a screen for overweight. Clinical correlation is necessary because adiposity is the actual health risk. For example, kids who are very muscular may have an elevated BMI but may still have low body fat. If necessary, contact a dietitian or exercise physiologist who is experienced in measuring body fat. Underweight = < 5 Risk of Overweight = 85
th
th
Percentile
to 94
th
percentile
Overweight = > 95th percentile
Boys. 2 to 20 years Body mass index-for-age percentiles
BMI 27
28 90
27
85
26
26
25
25 75
24
24
23
23 50
22
22
21
21 20
20
20
19
10
19
18
3
18
17
17
16
16
15
15
14
14
13
13
12
12 Age (years)
kg/m2 2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
kg/m2 13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
Because the BMI of children varies with age and gender, it is necessary to use standardized curves to determine if a child is overweight or not. As you can see on the chart above, a boy of 7 who has a BMI of 23 is overweight whereas another boy at age 17 with the same BMI is not.
Step 3: Choose a course of action Underweight: Screen for chronic diseases, malnutrition, eating disorders and genetic causes (e.g., thin parents). Normal Weight: Assess lifestyle and promote healthy habits including 1) a diet low in sugar, saturated and trans fats and high in fruits, vegetables and calcium; 2) at least 30 minutes of physical activity each day; and 3) limiting TV, video game and computer time to 2 hours a day. Risk of Overweight: Patients with a personal or family history of co-morbidities need full evaluation for overweight. If no history of co-morbidities, encourage healthy lifestyle as above and follow up in 1 year to recheck BMI. Overweight: Needs full evaluation and treatment for overweight. Developed by Arkansas Chapters of the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Academy of Family Practice, UAMS Preventive Nutrition Project, Arkansas Foundation for Medical Care. UAMS College of Public Health. UAMS Department of Pediatrics. Arkansas Department of Health. April 2004
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ARKANSAS CLINICIAN’S GUIDE TO WEIGHT PROBLEMS IN CHILDREN AND ADOLESCENTS Full Evaluation for Overweight Assess overweight
Assess Co-Morbidities Family History: Obesity, Diabetes, Hyperlipidemia, HTN, MI, Stroke PMH: chronic diseases ROS: sleep apnea, worsening asthma, exercise intolerance, reflux, limb pain, emotional difficulties, menstrual irregularities
Age first noted Perceived causes by child and parent Prior weight loss attempts Time in sedentary activities (TV, video games, computer) Time in physical activity (sports, walking, outdoor play) Body image, family stress and any depressive symptoms
Patient Examination
Assess diet Milk/dairy (should be 3-5 servings a day of skim or 1%) Fruits and vegetables (should be 5-9 servings a day) Intake of soft drinks and fruit and sugar drinks Fast food consumption Food behavior (large portions, skipping meals, eating while watching TV, high calorie snacking, binge eating)
Body habitus, BP (age appropriate), chest, extremities, acanthosis nigricans, thyromegaly, striae
Labs: Cholesterol panel Consider fasting glucose if FHx of type 2 diabetes or signs of insulin resistance Other lab based on individual findings
Treat Overweight: Based on Readiness to Change STAGE OF CHANGE Pre-Contemplation Contemplation
READINESS TO CHANGE Not currently interested in changing
Preparation Action
Interested in changing within next 6 months but not now Willing to initiate change in next 30 days Already making changes
Maintenance
Successful at change and trying to maintain
ACTION Give personalized reasons why change would be valuable; reassess at each visit. For both contemplation and preparation, ask for start dates for change. Set goals with family and pick goals that can be successfully achieved. Give encouragement for small changes. Suggest alternative strategies if weight gain continues. Continue periodic follow-up visits every 2-3 months as in any chronic disease.
Clinical Pearls •
First goal is no further weight gain. Children may "grow into" their weight as their height increases.
•
Increase fruits and vegetables, use skim or 1% milk. Decrease sugared drinks, candy, junk and fast foods.
•
Turn off the TV while eating. Remove unhealthy snacks from view. Put out fruits and vegetables. Regular meal times including breakfast. Child’s fist-size portions only. Limit snacking to healthy foods.
•
Encourage anything that increases breathing and heart rates (brisk walking, bicycling, dancing, other sports). Work up to one hour a day. Set limits on TV, video, and computer time (2 hrs/day total).
•
Self-monitoring is one of the most helpful tools. Have them record physical activity and diet, weigh every 2-4 weeks. Review records when patient comes back and give praise and/or problem solve.
•
Parents should act as role models, play with children, and eat meals together at the table at home.
If child continues to have inappropriate weight gain, reassess for compliance or the presence of emotional problems. Consider referral for problems beyond your scope of management such as co-morbidities, possible abuse or severe psychopathology.
Community Involvement To prevent obesity, local school policies on nutrition and physical activity should be improved. Clinicians can and should help guide their local school district's health policy committee. Resources For resources, referral and other information, or a free CME program, go to the Arkansas Center for Health Improvement website at http://www.achi.net/
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A2.1.3 CIRCUMFERENCE MEASUREMENTS: An additional method of assessing body composition is the measurement of girth of various body sections [4]. From the sum of the measurements, percentage body fat is determined from equations, tables, or nomograms. Equipment needed: Metal or fiberglass measuring tape with metric scale. Several various sections of the body are measured based on gender. The standard areas measured in males are the shoulders, chest, waist, biceps, thigh, and calf. In females, the standard areas are shoulders, bust, waist, abdomen, hips, thigh, calf, and biceps. Regardless of sites to be measured, the general rules are as follows: 1. Both the clinician and subject are in a standing position. 2. Unless noted otherwise, clinician is positioned in front of subject. 3. When applying tape to site, no air space should be between the subjects’ skin and the tape. Conversely, the tape should not be pulled tightly. 4. The tape should always be positioned in a horizontal plane to the subject. 5. The tape should be read to the closest 0.25 inch. 6. Clinician should have strong knowledge of anatomy to locate areas to be measured. The sites mentioned above are located and measured as follows. For male subjects: Shoulders: Subject stands erect with weight evenly distributed between both feet. Shoulders should be back and arms should hang freely at sides. The clinician positions tape over the largest area of the deltoids below the acromion. Chest: Subject will stand erect with feet shoulder-width apart. The subject abducts arms slightly so that the tape can be positioned around chest. The clinician locates the fourth costosternal joint, and the measurement is taken at this level. Waist: Subject will be undressed or wearing light clothing for this measurement. The subject will stand erect with abdomen relaxed, arms at sides, and feet together. The measurement will be taken at the narrowest part of the torso, above the level of the navel. Biceps: Subject stands erect with arms relaxed at sides. Clinician locates the most muscular aspect of the biceps, tape is positioned, and measurement is taken. Thigh (midthigh): For most accurate results, clinician will measure the midpoint between the inguinal crease and the proximal border of the patella. This measurement is made when the subject’s knee is flexed to 90 degrees. This site is marked and the tape is placed here once the subject returns to an erect, standing position. Calf: Subject stands with weight evenly distributed on both feet. Clinician locates maximum circumference of the gastrocnemius (calf) muscle, positions tape, and takes measurement. For female subjects: Shoulders: see male Bust: Subject stands erect with arms relaxed at sides. Measurement is made across the chest, at the nipple line. Waist: see male Abdomen: Subject stands with arms by the sides and feet together. The clinician places tape at the level of the greatest anterior extension of the abdomen. The level will usually be at the navel.
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Hips: Subject stands erect with arms at sides and feet together. The tape is positioned at the maximum circumference of the buttocks. Thigh: see male Calf: see male Biceps: see male
A2.1.4 MEASUREMENT
OF
RESTING BLOOD PRESSURE
A Dynamap system will be used. Two readings will be taken and averaged. If the two values differ by more than 5 mm Hg, an additional reading will be obtained. A small cuff will be used for the children. The study participant will abstain from eating and heavy exercise for at least 2 hours before the test. Study participants will also be instructed not to ingest caffeine within 30 minutes of blood pressure measurements. The study participant will be comfortably seated, with the arm slightly flexed, palm up, and the entire forearm supported at heart level on a smooth surface.
A2.1.5 MEASUREMENT
OF
RESTING HEART RATE
A stethoscope and watch with second hand or digital readout in seconds will be used. The study participant will sit quietly for at least 5 minutes before the test. The heart rate will be taken by auscultation. The stethoscope will be placed to the left of the sternum just above the level of the nipple. The heart beats will be counted for 30 seconds and then multiplied by 2. This will give total beats per minute. An average of three separate readings will be noted.
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A2.2 LABORATORY BLOOD WORK Biochemical markers, total cholesterol, triglycerides, high-density lipoproteins, and low-density lipoproteins will be examined in a certified laboratory. Study participants will be required to fast for 12 hours before the test. Blood collection and processing: Venous blood will be collected in the morning after a 12-hour fast with the study participant seated. Blood will be collected in tubes containing 1.5 mg/mL ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) for procedures requiring plasma, in tubes with no additives for serum measures, and in citrate tubes for homeostasis endpoints. Chemistry and lipid measures: All routine chemistry and lipid analyses will be performed on a Beckman Synchron CX5 automated chemistry analyzer, and the low-density lipoprotein cholesterol is calculated using the Friedewald equation. The coefficient of variation for these assays is less than 2%, and the laboratory participates in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ongoing lipid standardization program. Blind duplicate blood samples will be collected and analyzed in 10% of the study participants tested to verify laboratory values.
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A2.3 BODY COMPOSITION ANALYSIS Skinfold analysis: Skinfold analysis measures the thickness of a double fold of skin and subcutaneous adipose tissue at various body locations [5]. The use of skinfold calipers is the most commonly used method for determining obesity. The advantages of this method is its relative simplicity, quickness, and nonevasive nature. In addition, very little space is needed. Various equations have been developed in the prediction of body composition (see chapter 4 for reference) [4,6–13]. A two-site formula developed by Slaughter et al. [14] includes specific equations for overweight youth. Equipment needed: Skinfold caliper Tape measure Black felt pen General rules for taking skinfolds are as follows: 1. All measurements should be taken on the right side of the body for uniformity with most U.S. research efforts. 2. Sites to be measured should be marked for best accuracy until clinician is sufficiently skilled. 3. Clinician should feel the sites to familiarize him/herself with the subject and area. 4. Subject should not have exercised immediately before measurement because shifts in body fluid to skin will inflate normal skinfold values. 5. Clinician should take a minimum of three measurements at each site, spacing each measure at least 15 seconds apart. 6. Calipers should be accurately calibrated before measurement. 7. Caliper dial should be read approximately 4 seconds after pressure from hand on caliper jaw has been released. 8. Thumb and index finger pressure should be maintained throughout each measurement. Several sites have been designated and standardized for use by clinicians. For purposes of this investigation, two sites — triceps and subscapular — will be used. These sites are illustrated as follows: • Instructions for skinfold measurements at these sites are as follows: • Measurement of skinfolds: A skinfold caliper (Harpenden), tape measure and black felt pen will be used to measure triceps and subscapular skinfolds thickness. All measurements will be taken on the right side of the body. All sites will be marked with a black felt pen for accuracy after the anatomic location of the measurement has been verified by a trained technician. The subject will refrain from exercise at least 2 hours before the test. A minimum of three measurements will be taken at each site at least 15 seconds apart. The calipers will be calibrated after before each measurement. The caliper dial will be read approximately 4 seconds after pressure from the hand on the caliper is released. • Triceps skinfold: A vertical skinfold on the posterior midline of the upper arm will be examined. With the subject’s right elbow flexed at 90 degrees, the clinician will measure the distance between the lateral projection of the acromion process of the scapula and the inferior border the olecranon process of the elbow. The site will then be marked with the black felt pen at the midpoint on the lateral side of the arm. With the subject’s arm relaxed at his or her side, the clinician will stand behind he subject and grasp skinfold side with the thumb and index finger approximately one-half inch above the mark. The calipers will then be applied at the mark.
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• Subscapular skinfold: A diagonal skinfold will be obtained just below the lowest angle of the scapula. The clinician will feel for the bottom of the scapula to locate the site. The site will be marked and the skinfold will be grasped with thumb and index finger about one-half inch above the mark. The skinfold will then be taken on a 45-degree diagonal line toward the right side of the subject’s body. • Body fat • Body impedance has been validated as a measure of body fat and lean body mass. For example: The Tanita Body Composition Analyzer (model TBF-310) measures body weight and body impedance simultaneously by standing barefoot on the scale. Sanitation will be maintained by cleaning the Tanita pads on which the children will stand with alcohol before each measurement. Body fat and lean body mass are automatically recorded using a laptop computer. These variables will be expressed as a percent of total body weight for statistical analyses. The Tanita Body Composition Analyzer has been found to be accurate within 5% of body fat estimation by DEXA and is very reliable, with less than 1% variation within itself. • Measurement of differential photon absorption using dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry • Dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) will be used to determine percentage of fat, lean body mass, and bone mineral density in the program participants. DEXA uses an x-ray source to generate photons to scan study participants. Bone-mineral content measurements previously calibrated against secondary standards with ashed bone sections are used to help calculate fat-free mass (FFM). Percentage of fat and fat-free body can be predicted with accuracy by observing the ratio of absorbency of the different-energy-level photons, which are linearly related to the percentage of fat in the soft tissues of the body. The coefficient of variation of fatfree tissue measurement has been calculated at 2%, which is comparable to that obtained by hydrodensitometry [15–17]. • The participants will receive total DEXA body scans (e.g., Hologics QRX 2000). This machine has been cleared by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration as a market device used for scanning the anterior/posterior and lateral spine, femur, total body, and forearm to determine bone mineral density. The speed of the scan will be determined by the size of the study participant. Larger study participants will be programmed in the slow speed mode; smaller study participants in the fast speed mode. The study participants will be instructed to remove all metal and jewelry as well as their shoes before they are correctly positioned on the scan table, lying down on their back with their arms to their side. The DEXA will measure x-rays as they are transmitted through the study participant’s body. The study participant will be exposed to ionizing radiation, but there is no discomfort during the measurement. When using the DEXA, the dose of radiation is 0.02 to 0.03 mR for each total body scan (Hologics). This exposure is less than the 125 mR/yr, which is the amount individuals receive from nonmedical background radiation (lunar). The low dose of radiation will not adversely affect the bone or surrounding tissue. There are no side effects to using the DEXA, except in pregnant or nursing mothers. As the effects of ionizing radiation to unborn or nursing infants are unknown, females of child-bearing age should participate in a urine pregnancy test prior to testing. Women who are nursing infants should not participate in DEXA testing. The entire process causes very little discomfort and is a totally noninvasive step-by-step process.
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A2.4 MEASURES OF PHYSICAL ACTIVITY LEVEL AND FITNESS A2.4.1 SAMPLES
OF
SELF-REPORT QUESTIONNAIRES
Physical Activity Godin–Shephard Leisure Time Physical Activity Questionnaire [18]. The Godin–Shephard is a four-item self-reported recall of usual physical activities during a typical week. Children are asked to write how many times per week they engage in vigorous-, moderate-, and light-intensity activity for 15 minutes or more. Examples of the types of activity are provided. A total score is derived by multiplying the frequency of each category by a standard metabolic equivalent (Vigorous × 9, Moderate × 5, Light × 3). Children are also asked to report how many times they engage in activity long enough to make them sweat. Adequate reliability and validity have been reported [19] with children as young as in the fourth grade. Sedentary Behavior Children will be asked to report the number of hours they spend in sedentary pursuits both before and after school. The sedentary activities assessed will include television, video, computer, reading, homework, and telephone. The list of sedentary activities will be taken from the Self-Administered Physical Activity Checklist [20]. Sedentary behavior from this measure is correlated with body mass index percentile in previous research [21]. Dieting Social Support The Children’s Dietary Social Support Scale (DSS) [22] is a seven-item measure of perceived social support for healthy dietary choices. The scale assesses support from family, friends, and teachers in a yes–no format. The measure has been shown to relate to behavioral intentions and behavior change [23,24]. The reliability and validity of the measure has been established, and normative data are available [22–24]. Physical Activity Social Support The Physical Activity Social Support Scale (PASS) [23,24] is an 18-item measure that assesses perceived support for physical activity. Support from family, teachers, and friends is assessed in a yes–no format, and positive and negative social support subscales are derived.
A2.4.2 DETAILED EXERCISE TESTING PROTOCOLS The Physical Work Capacity Test The physical work capacity test (PWC) is a multi-stage cycle ergometry test. Subjects pedal for three 2-minute stages at progressively increasing workloads. The PWC protocol uses a 5-minute warm-up at 25 watts before maximal testing. The pedal rate should be held constant at 60 rpm throughout testing. The test should begin unloaded at 60 rpm for 2 minutes. After the 2 minutes, workload should increase by 29 watts (0.5 kg) every 2 minutes until 118 watts. From that point, power output should increase by 15 watts (0.25 kg) until volitional termination or a drop in pedal rate of 5 rpm. Heart rates up to 160 bpm are used to extrapolate to the power output at a heart rate of 170 bpm [25].
LOFTIN–SOTHERN TEST The Loftin–Sothern [26] treadmill protocol is a modified Balke [27] protocol that includes a baseline standing measure and three submaximal, steady-state stages. The test was designed to observe
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baseline, submaximal, and maximal differences in specific metabolic and physiologic parameters between nonobese and obese children during weight-bearing exercise (walking). Pretest:
Baseline: Submaximal:
Maximal:
Resting in a seated position for 30 minutes. Fasting for 4 hours before the time of the test. No vigorous activity for 48 hours before the test. Expired gases are collected with a metabolic measurement cart for 10 minutes while subject is standing, unsupported. Expired gases are collected with a metabolic measurement cart during treadmill walking as follows: 2.5 mph for 5 minutes at 0% grade. 3.0 mph for 5 minutes at 0% grade. 3.5 mph for 5 minutes at 0% grade. 3.5 mph until test completion. Grade is increased 2% every 2 minutes until test completion.
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A2.5 PSYCHOLOGICAL TESTING Test
Year
Location
Child Behavior Checklist: Achenback™ [28,29]
1991
Children’s Depression Inventory: Kovacs M [30]
1981
FACES III: Olson DH, Portner J, Lavee Y [31]
1985
The Piers-Harris Children’s Self-Concept Scale: Piers EV, Harris DB [32–34]
1969
University of Vermont 1 S. Prospect Street Burlington, VT 05401 The Psychological Corporation 555 Academic Court San Antonio, TX 78204-2498 Family Social Science 290 McNeal Hall University of Minnesota St. Paul, MN 55108 Western Psychological Services 12031 Wilshire Boulevard Los Angeles, CA 90025-1251
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A2.6 TANNER STAGING Sexual maturity rating will be determined by a physician (trained in pediatric medicine) using methods from Faulkner and Tanner [35] on all study participants.
APPENDIX 3 Sample Intervention Materials
Sample Intervention Materials
325
A3.1 RESOURCES A3.1.1 RESOURCES FOR PEDIATRIC WEIGHT MANAGEMENT EDUCATIONAL MATERIALS, SAMPLE HANDOUTS, AND SELF-MONITORING FORMS Resource Committed to Kids/Trim Kids affiliates: Birmingham, Alabama: Children’s Hospital of Alabama 1600 Seventh Street South Birmingham, Alabama 35233 Denver, Colorado: University of Colorado Health Sciences Center Department of Pediatrics 4200 East 9th Avenue Box C 225 Denver, Colorado 80262 Phone: (303) 315-7037 The Good LIFE Clinic The Children’s Hospital – B218 Department of Pediatrics 1056 East 19th Avenue Denver, Colorado 80218 Phone: (303) 864-5370 Fort Lauderdale, Florida: US BARIATRIC-KIDS 4800 Northeast 20th Terrace Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. 33308 Phone: (954) 351-7770 x 129 E-mail: [email protected] Jupiter, Florida: Committed To Kids Jupiter Institute of the Healing Arts 175 Toney Penna Drive #101 Jupiter, Florida 33458 Phone: (561) 746-1205 Chicago, Illinois: Finch University of Health Sciences The Chicago Medical School 3333 Green Bay Road North Chicago, Illinois 60064 Phone: (847) 578-8497 Pikeville, Kentucky: Pediatric Clinic 261-277 Town Mountain Rd Pikeville, Kentucky 41501 Phone: (606) 437-3500 x3805
Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Committed to Kids Pennington Biomedical Research Center 6400 Perkins Road Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70808 Phone: (225) 763-2677 New Orleans, Louisiana: Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center Department of Pediatrics 1542 Tulane Ave. New Orleans, Louisiana 70112 Phone: (504) 556-9822 Holland, Michigan: 926 South Washington Holland, Michigan 49423 Phone: (616) 494-4065 Gulfport, Mississippi: 3300 15th Street Gulfport, Mississippi 39501 Phone: (504) 646-1017 St. Louis, Missouri: Committed to Kids, St. Louis 220 VonBeheren Chesterfield, Missouri 63005 Phone: (636) 530-9880 Buffalo, New York: Kazabee, Inc. PO Box 391 Buffalo, New York 14226 Phone: (716) 906-1443 Web site: http://www.kazabee.com Columbus, Ohio: Matrix — Committed to Kids 2 Easton Oval, Suite 450 Columbus, Ohio 43219 Phone: (614) 475-9500 Salem, Oregon: Committed To Kids Salem Hospital’s Rehabilitation Center 2561 Center Street N.E. Salem, Oregon 97309-5014 Phone: (503) 561-6990
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Corpus Christi, Texas: Driscoll Children’s Hospital 3533 South Alemeda Street Corpus Christi, Texas 78411 Phone: (361) 694-4864 Fax: (361) 694-4832
McAllen, Texas: Committed To Kids, McAllen 220 South Bicentennial Blvd, Suite A McAllen, Texas 78501 Phone: (956) 668-1060 E-mail: [email protected]
Fort Worth, Texas: 709 West Leuda Street Fort Worth, Texas 76104 Phone: (817) 336-7275
Bellevue, Washington: Pro Sports Club, 20/20 Lifestyles 4455 148th Avenue N.E. Bellevue, Washington 98007 Phone: (425) 861-6218 Fax: (425) 861-6277 Web site: www.proclub.com/kids/committedToKids.asp
Other pediatric weight management treatment centers: Fit Matters, Larabida Children’s Hospital http://www.larabida.org Shapedown http://www.shapedown.com The Hip Hop Clinic at St. Francis Hospital http://www.stfrancishospitals.org Resource
Contact Information
Committed to Kids/Trim Kids Trim Kids at eDiets.com Trim Kids DVD at eDiets.com Healthy Families Healthy You OWL: Optimal Weight for Life Program Stanford Pediatric Weight Program Winning Ways for Kids Client-centered approach to nutrition education for the prevention of overweight with children Families in Balance Get Kids in Action Kids Weight Down Positive Choice The Body Shop ICAN — Intensive Counseling Activity and Nutrition REACH 2010 Project (Oklahoma Native American) St. Joseph’s Mercy Center for Health Management in Macomb Teen Choices and Challenges
www.trimkids.com www.eDiets.com/familyandfriends www.eDiets.com (store) http://[email protected] http://www.chkd.org/health_library/ http://www.childrenshospital.org/OWL http://pediatricweightcontrol.stanford.edu http://www.gundluth.org/nutrition http://www.dhss.state.mo.us/missourinutrition/resource http://www.boswellcenter.com http://www.getkidsinaction.org http://www.maimonidesmed.org/clinicalservices/ http://www.positivechoice.org http://www.humc.net http://www.cardinalhill.org http://www.health.state.ok.us http://www.macombweb.trinity-health.org http://www.teenchoicesandchallenges.com
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A3.1.2 PROGRAMS AVAILABLE FOR INCREASING PHYSICAL ACTIVITY AND PROMOTING HEALTHY NUTRITION Active Living Partners: Physical Activity and Health Information News (2003) Human Kinetics Publishers, Inc. P.O. Box 5076 Champaign, Illinois 61825-5076 1-800-747-4457 Fax: 217-351-1549 Web site: www.humankinetics.com American Alliance for Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance 1900 Association Drive Reston, Virginia 20191-1599 1-800-213-7193 or 703-476-3400 fax 703-476-8316 Web site: http://www.aahperd.org American College of Sports Medicine P.O. Box 1440 Indianapolis, Indiana 46206-1440 American Heart Association 7320 Greenville Avenue Dallas, Texas 75231 1-800-640-4640 Fax: 1-800-242-8721 Web site: http://www.amhrt.org The American Volkssport Association 1001 Pat Booker Road, Suite 101 Universal City, Texas 78148 210-659-2112 or 1-800-830-WALK Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Chronic Disease, Prevention and Health Promotion, Division of Nutrition and Physical Activity 4770 Buford Highway Atlanta, Georgia 30341 1-888-CDC-4NRG 1-888-232-4674 Web site: http://www.cdc.gov Child and Adolescent Trial for Cardiovascular Health (CATCH) The set has a School Nutrition Program Guide, a Guidebook and PE Activity Box, and four different curriculums and three video tapes for third, fourth, and 5th graders. National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute Information Center P.O. Box 30105 Bethesda, Maryland 20824-0105 301-251-1222 Guidelines for School and Community Programs to Promote Lifelong Physical Activity Among Young People U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services Centers for Disease Control and Prevention MMWR 1997: Vol. 46 No. RR-6; Atlanta, Georgia
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HeartPower Resource kit for teachers pre-kindergarten through 8th grade. American Heart Association, Alaska Region 1057 W. Fireweed, Suite 206 Anchorage, Alaska 99505 1-888-276-0858 How to Promote Physical Activity in Your Community: A Project to Promote Partnering on Physical Activity December 1997, Booklet, ASTDHPPHE 1015 Fifteenth St. NW Suite 410 Washington, D.C. 20005 JumpSTART Program JumpSTART is a school-based program that offers elementary teachers activities to incorporate into existing curricula for grades 3–5. It has a Letter of Introduction and a Teacher’s Guide. It also includes materials to encourage parent involvement. National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute Information Center P.O. Box 30105 Bethesda, Maryland 20824-0105 301-251-1222 Web site: http://www.epi.hss.state.ak.us Myths and Conceptions, PEI Active Living Alliance Prince Edward Island, Canada. Web site: http://www. edu.pe.ca/activeliving/myths2.htm National Association for Sport and Physical Education 1900 Association Drive Reston, Virginia 20191-1599 1-800-213-7193 or 703-476-3410 Fax: 703-476-8316 National Association of Governor’s Councils on Physical Fitness and Sports 201 South Capitol Avenue, Suite 560 Indianapolis, Indiana 46225 317-237-5630 Fax: 317-237-5632 Web site: http://www.fitnesslink.com National Coalition for Promoting Physical Activity (NCPPA) 1900 Association Drive Reston, Virginia 20191-1599 Web site: http://www.ncppa.org/ncppa National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute Information Center P.O. Box 30105 Bethesda, Maryland 20824-0105 Web site: http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/nhlbi
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National Recreation and Park Association P.O. Box 6287 Arlington, Virginia 22206 1-800-626-6772 Web site: http://www.nrpa.org Partnership for a Walkable America National Safety Council 1121 Spring Lake Drive Itasca, Illinois 60143-3201 630-285-1121 Web site: http://www.nsc.org/walkable.htm Physical Activity and Health, A Report of the Surgeon General, Executive Summary. U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, The President’s Council on Physical Fitness and Sports, 1996 Superintendent of Documents P.O. Box 371954 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15250-7954 President’s Council on Physical Fitness and Sports Box SG 701 Pennsylvania Ave., NW, Suite 250 Washington, D.C. 20004 202-690-9000 President’s Council on Physical Fitness and Sports President’s Council on Physical Fitness and Sports Report: Physical Activity and Sports in the Lives of Girls — Physical and Mental Health Dimensions from an Interdisciplinary Approach. Washington, D.C.: President’s Council on Physical Fitness and Sports, 1997. Preventing Childhood Obesity: Health in the Balance National Academies Press 202-334-3313 or 1-800-624-6242 Web site: http://www.nap.edu Ready. Set. It’s Everywhere You Go: CDC’s Guide to Promoting Moderate Physical Activity Media Kit Centers for Disease Control and Prevention U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services 4770 Buford Highway Atlanta, Georgia 30341 SPARK (Sports, Play, and Active Recreation for Kids) A Physical Education Curriculum for students in grades K-6. 1-800-SPARK-PE U.S. Department of Health and Human Services [USDHHS]. (1996). Physical activity and health: A report of the Surgeon General. Atlanta, Georgia: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services [USDHHS]. (2000). CDC’s Guidelines for School and Community Programs: Promoting Lifelong Physical Activity, An Overview. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Wellness Council of America 7101 Newport Avenue, Suite 311 Omaha, Nebraska 68152 402-572-3590
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A3.1.3 TAKE CHARGE ON-SITE TRAINING PROGRAM CARE PROVIDERS
FOR
PRIMARY HEALTH
Take Charge A model program designed to increase physical activity among employees. National Coalition for Promoting Physical Activity (NCPPA) 1900 Association Drive Reston, Virginia 20191-1599 Web site: http://www.ncppa.org/ncppa
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A3.2 TRAFFIC LIGHT DIET http://www.trafficlightdiet.com/
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A3.3 SAMPLE EXERCISE LESSONS (From Sothern, M., von Almen, T. K., and Schumacher, H., Trimkids, New York: Harper Collins, 2001.) 1. Lesson 1: Benefits of exercise, exercise safety, warming-up, exercise prescriptions, increasing your daily activity — The MPEP step a. Exercise Benefits and Safety Refer to the program book [2] for information on the benefits of exercise. Discuss the following safety tips with the students. Stop exercising if you feel any discomfort in a muscle or joint. It’s normal to feel a gentle burning sensation, but if the pain is worse than that, stop immediately! You’ll need to report it to your teacher, coach, exercise physiologist, or doctor the next time you see him or her. Do the exercise exactly as instructed. The exercises in the program book have been designed especially for you, and you shouldn’t change them. Always warm up before and cool down after each exercise session. b. Techniques for Warming Up Verbal cues: Before you do any type of exercise, you’ll need to warm up for at least 5 minutes before each session. Warming up is simple: move each part of your body in a slow, controlled manner. When you slowly move an arm, a leg, or a shoulder, your heart sends blood to that body part, delivering fuel to the muscles and tissues that are in motion. Moving your arms and legs helps the heart pump blood throughout your entire body, preparing your body for more movement. Try the suggestions below, or make up your own! Some warm-up suggestions: March in place for 3–5 minutes Do arm circles forward, then back, 20 times Do 10 modified jumping jacks or “side jacks”: instead of jumping, alternate placing each heel out to the side on the floor while the arms go above the head Tap each foot 20 times, then rise on your toes 10 times. c. Exercise Prescriptions: Designing a Formal Exercise Routine We have discovered that just telling families to be more physically active is just not enough. Most overweight kids need weekly structured exercise goals. As they do in casual fun and play, allow your patients to choose the exercise activities they most enjoy to make up their formal exercise routine. Every child who participates in the program will engage in a tailor-made exercise program. In the beginning, we make absolutely sure that the goals each child establishes are easy to accomplish. It’s that initial success that motivates the child to keep going, and each child has his or her own level of ability, which parents and children must respect. Severely overweight children will have a more difficult time exercising than will moderately or mildly overweight kids. As a consequence, they should start out doing less, at a slower pace, and fewer times per week. It is perfectly all right to begin with 1 or 2 days a week of approximately 20 minutes of exercise and to increase the amount of activity weekly as pounds are shed. In addition, your patient doesn’t have to do all 20 minutes at one time. Ten minutes in the morning and 10 in the afternoon or evening will still burn the same number of calories. It’s best for seriously obese children to start out doing exercises that support their extra body weight, such as swimming or riding a bike. Moderately overweight children should begin with non-weight-bearing exercise first and gradually alternate with
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weight-bearing activities. They can participate in walking or playing tag, for example, or basketball, as long as they take frequent rests when necessary. Again, they can gradually work up to longer walks and fewer rest stops. Mildly overweight children can safely participate in most activities, but even that little bit of extra weight may slow them down somewhat, so pacing is important. Gradually work up to higher speeds, harder movements, and longer duration. Encourage the parents to consider enrolling their child for one or two afternoons a week in some kind of structured dance, martial arts (such as karate), gymnastics (only for chubby or mildly overweight children), or a similar activity. This will help foster friendships with other children who are active, and it will give you a break from having to supervise his or her entire exercise program. Make sure parents speak to the coach or teacher beforehand to discuss their child’s special needs. Describe the four color-coded levels to your patient and family; identify which one he or she is in, and explain that there is a different exercise and eating program for each color. Let him or her know that when he or she reaches his or her first weight-loss goals, he or she will graduate to the next color level, and that the objective is to attain his or her long-term goal weight and be a lifelong member in the Blue Level. Weekly exercise activities: Each week, you will find two types of activities: • The Weekly Aerobic Activity • The Weekly Strength and Flex Exercises Each activity includes recommendations as to how often, and for how long, your patients should perform it. These are meant to be realistic goals — they are also the minimal goals. If your patients want to do more — great! Usually if you give them less, they’ll do more. Then you can really praise them for going over and above. This really helps them achieve “mastery” — a feeling that they have accomplished something special. Read through the following information with your patients and their families to understand the exercise strategy: The Moderate-Intensity Progressive Exercise Program is designed especially for overweight kids. Remember that moderate — not fast or hard — exercise is the best for losing weight. You can do moderate exercise for hours without getting too tired, which burns the most calories and fat. After about 30 minutes of moderate exercise, your ability to burn fat increases, so the longer you exercise at a moderate pace, the more fat you’ll burn. This program uses moderate workout levels for aerobic, strengthening, endurance, and flexibility exercises. Each color-coded level has its own regimen. It is called progressive because it gradually increases in duration and frequency over time during the 12 weeks. Duration means the amount of time you spend exercising at each session. Frequency refers to the number of exercise sessions you do in a given week. Intensity means how hard and fast you exercise. The intensity of your workout can change according to the speed, grade (steepness), muscles you use, and the force or resistance that you apply. Vigorous Intensity = >55–70% maximal oxygen uptake (VO2 max) or >65–80% maximal heart rate (MAXHR) Moderate Intensity = 45–55% VO2 max or 55–65% MAXHR Low Intensity = <45% VO2 max or <55% MAXHR The maximal oxygen uptake refers to the total amount of oxygen that an individual will consume when exercising at maximum effort. Called VO2 max for short, it is well accepted as the best indicator of aerobic fitness.
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Here is a Sample Week 1 Aerobic Activity: Recommended Goals (refer to the program book for the remaining weeks’ goals): Red Level: the exercise goal this week is 2 days per week for 20 minutes each day. Yellow Level: the exercise goal this week is 2 days per week for 25–30 minutes each day. Green Level: the exercise goal this week is 3 days per week for 35–40 minutes each day. Blue Level: the exercise goal this week is 3 days per week for 30–60 minutes each day. Encourage your patients to write their goals in the Aerobic Activity and Food Checklist (Appendix A3.10). This is the minimum amount of aerobic exercise that they should perform this week. In the spaces indicated, encourage them to list the activities accomplished this week and how long they were done. If they know their heart rates, it should be written in the space provided. Check to make sure your patients are performing the activities for the length of time and the number of days per week suggested for each color level. They should do them at a moderate or medium pace and be able to talk without strain while exercising. If breathing becomes rapid or labored, instruct them to slow down. Have them check their heart rates to determine whether 55–65% of maximum age-predicted heart rate has been attained. The program exercise DVD (see Appendix A3.1.1) illustrates how to take a heart rate. Encourage your patients to do as much playing as possible. Let them know that playing burns even more calories than structured exercise. Resist the urge to push, thinking more will be better. If they can do it, great. But if you assign them less, they may do more. d. Increasing Your Daily Activity — The MPEP Step Verbal cues: Think about large people. Do they move fast? Usually not, and that may be one reason why they are large. When you move slowly, you don’t burn many calories. You also don’t use many muscles, and those you do use aren’t used effectively. Now, think of people who walk briskly. They’re usually trimmer and appear more energetic. They automatically burn more calories simply because they move faster and cover more ground in less time. It is amazing how simply walking faster, taking longer strides, and holding your chin up a little higher can make you look and feel lighter and more effective. And that feels good! We want you to burn as many calories as you can as often as you can. To do that, you’ll have to work your body more effectively on a regular basis. Now, when you hear the term “work,” it will refer to how much energy you expend to burn calories. One way to work more effectively is to walk more briskly, covering as much ground as possible. By walking faster, you automatically increase your daily activity, which will help you lose and keep the weight off. The following is a description of a role play session as presented in Chapter 20, Lesson 1. The conversation among the insructor, patients, and parents that should be conducted during the lesson is detailed in the program book as follows: “Does this look familiar?” Dr. Melinda asks as she drops her head, rolls her shoulders and inches slowly forward. “Who do I look like? Do I look very tall? How tall do I look?” One of the kids snickers, “Four feet tall!” Everyone chuckles, including Dr. Melinda. “Do I look important and like I know where I’m going? Can you even see my face? When your head is down and your shoulders are hunched forward, no one can see your pretty face! You appear shorter and more overweight.”
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Then, Dr. Melinda lifts her head and holds her shoulders back. She walks forward briskly, smiling widely. “Now who do I look like?” she asks. “A supermodel, right?” Again, the kids laugh. “Maybe not, but I do look taller and more important, don’t I? Actually, I look about six inches taller just because I lifted my head. And because of that, I also look about 30 pounds lighter.”
Melissa was a participant in our program and lost 2 pounds in the first week just by walking with the MPEP-STEP. She also reported that others reacted differently toward her, she accomplished more, and she felt much more energetic. 2. Lesson 2: Exercise Intensity and Pacing Skills (Metabolic Systems), Cooling Down after Exercise a. Exercise Intensity and Pacing Skills (Metabolic Systems): The Body’s Metabolic Engine [2] Verbal cues: For overweight and even slightly chubby kids, activity may be less frequent because they cannot keep up with the demands of certain sports, dance, or group games. In addition, their metabolic systems — the engines of their bodies — are different. Using a car as a metaphor, we can say that chubby and overweight children run out of gas sooner because the excess weight makes the engine run harder to move the car forward. A small car can go farther than a large truck on the same amount of gas. Regardless of weight, your body has three types of engines (or metabolisms), much like a car has three different gears: one for fast take-offs, one for start-and-stop driving, and one for highway driving. Medium-slow: This engine enables movement for long stretches of time. This is the engine that is fired up for aerobic exercises. It uses a combination of oxygen, fat stored in the body, and sugar (or carbohydrates) for fuel. After about 20 minutes of activity at the same speed, your body begins to use more of the stored fat for fuel. If you have not eaten for several hours, it will gobble up even more of that stored fat. The longer you maintain the medium-slow speed, the more calories and fat you will burn. Because overweight children have more stored fat than others, they can exercise in the medium-slow engine for hours without running out of gas as long as their pace stays low and consistent. But they must keep it slow and steady for a long period of time. It’s all right to use the fast engine for a moment as long as it is brief and they return to the easier pace. Fast: This engine taps into the body’s anaerobic capabilities. “Anaerobic” means “without air” — this engine depends not on oxygen, but primarily on sugar stored in the muscles (glycogen) for its fuel source. You kick-start this engine whenever the speed of your activity increases to a higher level. Your chubby child can use the fast engine until the workload becomes too difficult. At this point a substance called lactic acid will build in his muscles, making his muscles burn and feel tired. His breathing rate will also increase because he is trying to take in more oxygen so he can shift gears and begin using the mediumslow engine again. Unfortunately, because the fast engine is anaerobic, trying to take in more oxygen by breathing faster will not help. Your child’s body will not allow him to shift to the medium-slow, aerobic engine unless he slows down. The fast engine has a very small fuel tank. It only takes between 3 and 5 minutes for your child to run out of gas. Unless activity is reduced to a speed or level to allow the child to shift to the medium-slow engine again, your child will be physically unable to continue.
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The fast engine is great for short periods of exercise that promote strength and power. Sprinting is one example. So are stomach crunches. Super Fast: Skilled and powerful athletes such as Olympic weight-lifters, jumpers, or sprinters use the super-fast engine. It relies on chemicals made from fuel stored directly in muscle fibers and immediately ready for use. The tank of the super-fast engine is even smaller than the fast engine. When children turn on that engine, they will run out of gas in only 10 seconds! Your body uses different fuel systems for different levels or “intensities” of work: Very Fast 0–10 seconds then you run out of ATP
• • • • •
Fast
Medium to Slow
10 seconds–5 minutes then you run out of glycogen and muscles fill with lactic acid
After 5 minutes and for hours and hours after (if you do not go too fast), you breathe out CO2
ATP stands for adenosintriphosphate, a long word for the chemical fuel made from sugar. Glycogen is another long word for sugar made from the food we eat. Aerobic. The sugar and oxygen we breathe combine with stored fat to give us the “gas” to go. Lactic acid — this is what makes your muscles burn and feel tired. CO2 stands for carbon dioxide — the air we breathe out or exhale when we do aerobic exercise.
You can increase the size of the tanks in each of these engines by engaging in regular exercise training, and increasing how often (frequency) and how long (duration) you spend being physically active during any given week. Doing this will allow you to exercise for longer periods in all of the metabolic engines. Don’t rush the process! The heavier your child is, the longer it will take for her to comfortably use and improve her engines. Chubby children take at least 3 months to experience a noticeable change, and at least 6 months to reach their full potential for improvement. Heavier kids will take longer. Verbal cues to parents: Finally, listen to your child. When she is exercising and says that she is tired, that means she is tired! If she says she is hurting, that means she is hurting! Allow her to slow down or stop to catch her breath. Then, gently prod her back into moving at a pace that is more comfortable. You may think she is faking her discomfort, but she is probably not. If you get irritated with her limitations, remember: her excess weight is physically disabling, she needs encouragement, not criticism. b. Techniques for Cooling Down Verbal cues: 5–10 minutes before you complete your exercise — whether it’s riding your bike, jogging, swimming, walking, or dancing — you need to start cooling down. Do this gradually until you are maintaining a slow, easy pace. Continue at this pace for the last 10 minutes or so of your workout. Cooling down is important because your body needs time to return to its normal heart rate and breathing pattern. Otherwise, the blood traveling to your exercising muscles will pool, or remain in the muscles. This can make you feel dizzy or nauseous, and you may experience painful muscle cramps. Cooling down is just like warming up. You simply move your arms and legs slowly after exercising, and your blood leaves the muscles and returns to the heart and
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lungs. Your legs even have a built-in pump to help with that process, but you have to keep them moving for the pump to work. Slowing down before stopping your exercise also helps bring your temperature back to its normal range. That’s why it’s called cooling down! No matter what exercise you are doing, always slow the pace for the last 5–10 minutes. 3. Lesson 3: Aerobic Exercise — Modified Field Sports; The Homework Rule a. Modified Field Sports Family Flag Football The parents and children will participate in a flag football game (no tackling and use the flag belts if available). If you don’t have flag belts, purchase inexpensive table napkins in two different colors. Divide the patients and family members into two teams and ask all of them to tuck one of the colored napkins into their waistband. Play the game of football with these aerobic rules: Allow 20 seconds only to prepare for the kick-off. Allow only 10 seconds for the huddle. The ball must be snapped for the next play no more than 10 seconds after it is down. Switch player position: If you are quarterback and your son is running back, switch every 15 minutes. These rules keep the game moving and the calories burning. Special Instructions: The parents may serve as goal posts by holding their arms in a “letter L” position facing inward to each other. The instructor will need to have a parent serve as quarterback to help explain the rules of the game to the inexperienced younger children. Aerobic Softball The group will participate in aerobic softball as follows: The game follows regulation rules; however, the participants are instructed that when the opposing team scores a point, they must walk/run the bases; likewise, when the team up to bat gets an out, they must walk/run the bases. You may also add 10 modified jumping jacks for each strike or error in the field, to keep the kids even more active. Periodically check breathing and heart rate to illustrate how aerobic softball is just as vigorous as structured exercise. b. The Homework Rule: Play Now! Homework Later! Don’t Do Your Homework — Yet! In 1987, W.B. Strong recommended that children should not be allowed to do homework directly after school [26]. Children have already been confined during the long, often tedious, day in an activity-restricted environment, and need a break to enjoy physical activities and to let off steam. The following handout can be given to the children to encourage them to take an activity break upon their return home from school. The MPEP After-School Plan “Hit those books! No television until all of the homework is done!” Is this what Mom or Dad says the minute you get home from school? But it’s really hard to start your homework right away, because you feel tired from working and studying at school all day. Do you think it’s your body that is tired, or is it just your brain? Try this instead: As soon as you get home from school, go to the refrigerator and get a big glass of ice water. Maybe you’re tired because you are thirsty (“dehydrated” means you don’t have enough water in your body).
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Then you should go outside if the weather is nice, and walk, or ride your bike, or skate, or walk the dog. You could play ball, or play tag, or jump rope. If the weather is bad, find a large area inside, and turn on some music and dance. Why don’t you get your TrimKids exercise video or workbook and do some exercises? Maybe there is an exercise program on television. You should try to do at least 30 minutes of any kind of “moving around” before you start your homework (45 to 60 minutes is even better). This will give your brain a chance to rest from the long school day. Remember, when you get home, your brain is tired, but your body isn’t. Work the muscles that have been sitting at a desk all day! Then do your homework after you exercise. You may still have time before dinner for one television show. Verbal cues to parents: When children get home after a day at school, their brains are tired, but not their bodies. They have already been confined during the long, oftentedious, day in a relatively sedentary environment. They need a break to enjoy physical activities and let off steam. From now on, hand your child a big glass of ice water, then tell him to go outside and walk, ride a bike, skate, play ball, jump rope, or play tag. If the weather is bad, tell him to do some dancing, go to his imagination station, or play a round of indoor basketball. Make sure he does between 30 and 60 minutes of moving around before he or she starts his homework. 4. Lesson 4: Muscular Strength and Endurance: MPEP pump; Strength Training Circuit; Creating Indoor Play Areas a. Muscular Strength and Endurance: MPEP pump Verbal cues for parents: Aerobic exercise is great for healthy hearts and lungs. But if your child engages in only aerobic exercise, she will be missing two critical components: strength and flexibility. What good is a car with a great engine but that has no tires, hood, top, or doors? Muscles provide the framework for your child’s engine and must be strong to protect him or her from injury. A bone is only as strong as the muscle attached to it. Muscles must be exercised with some kind of weight at least once or twice a week to keep them tight or toned. This happens through the force or resistance of strength training. Children can strengthen their muscles through lifting weights (soup cans will do), or by simply lifting a limb or part of their own body (as in modified push ups). Strength training will become a regular part of their routine in the Trim Kids Program. Strengthening exercises result in toned muscles. Toned muscles are metabolically active tissues: they burn more calories than fat even when the child is not moving. In fact, a toned muscle burns 33 calories per hour to maintain itself, compared with fat tissue, which burns only two to three calories per hour. Strong muscles are a lot like furnaces. The stronger the muscle, the more intensely the furnace burns. This furnace is called the metabolic rate. Your pediatrician can guide you to identify the kinds of strengthening activities that are safe for your overweight child. His growing bones and developing joints may be at risk for injury if he asks too much of his body by strenuous lifting, pushing, jarring, or pulling. Even jumping could cause harm. Severely overweight children should only participate in strength exercises that offer good support for their joints. The exercises in the Trim Kids Program were designed especially for overweight children.
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On getting your pediatrician’s approval and making sure the equipment is in good repair, encourage your child to strengthen her muscles by • climbing trees • swinging on monkey bars • jumping on trampolines with safety nets • swinging on swing sets • skipping rope • playing hopscotch • climbing in and out of a swimming pool • participating in gymnastics • dancing • learning a martial art Strength training has many other health benefits: it may prevent bone fractures and arthritis, as well as diseases such as osteoporosis, diabetes, and heart disease. It will make your child look better: strong muscles under his or her skin will make him or her look toned and fit. Verbal cues: Muscles have very little brains — they remember only after being shown many times. They will stay tight without your telling them to, if you exercise them with weight at least twice a week. The most important thing is that a muscle that you have exercised becomes a trained muscle. Trained muscles burn calories even when you are not exercising them. Fat tissue just hangs around. An Introduction to Resistance Weight Training Resistance weight training includes weight training, strength training, circuit weight training, isometrics, and isokinetics, which involve exercising the muscles against moderate to heavy loads, generally with few repetitions. Its use results in varying degrees of muscle size increase (hypertrophy), increased lean body mass, and increased strength and power. For years, resistance weight training evoked a negative image and was avoided by athletic and medical professionals alike. This has changed with recent research in this still controversial field of training. Guidelines for resistance training are listed in the program book [2]. Force and Weight Aspects Individuals should begin the program at 60% or less of their maximum strength threshold. This weight should be maintained until 8 to 12 repetitions can be performed at specified velocities and in perfect form (technique). At this time an increase in weight of 5 to 10% is recommended. Speed of Movement (Velocity) A 2- to 4-second count for both the lifting or pulling and lowering or releasing phases with constant movement throughout is recommended. The movement should be performed with no rest and with a slight hold at the highest-force resistance. The velocity can be increased slightly when using free weights, and a hold is not necessary. Frequency Untrained children should begin the program at a frequency of once per week, with twice per week the maximum. Trained children can begin the program at a frequency of twice per week, with a minimum of once per week to prevent a loss in strength and muscle size. A minimum of 1 day between workouts is necessary to
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guarantee enough rest to promote strength gains. Two to 3 days of rest between workouts is advisable for individuals working at peak workloads. This will help to prevent overwork and injury. It is inadvisable to work out with weights more frequently than three times per week. Duration A period of 1.5 to 2 minutes per station is suggested. Each station should consist of one or two sets of 8 to 12 repetitions performed as specified. This will induce a balanced workout of muscular strength, muscular endurance, and slight VO2 improvement provided there is a minimum rest period with no more than 30 seconds between stations (a 15-second rest is recommended). Technique Body alignment should follow American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM) guidelines with positioning for maximum isolation of designated muscles or muscle groups. The general technique for all exercises is as follows: • Movement should occur only in the joint adjacent to the muscles being contracted. All other body parts should be stationary and relaxed. • As the movement begins, the individual should focus on the muscles being worked and fully contract (squeeze and shorten) the muscle into the holding point. When extending the weights, a maximum range of motion should be achieved. • There should be a light grip on the handles unless specifically working the forearm. This prevents an unnecessary elevation in blood pressure. • Technique specific to each exercise should be illustrated by a weight-lifting instructor or trainer. • Breathing should be continuous and at a normal rate throughout with no specific inhalation or exhalation phase. To aid in concentration, a quiet, nondistracting atmosphere is recommended. Warm-up should consist of approximately 5 minutes of low-impact jogging moves, range of motion without weight, and gentle stretching. Cool down should be a similar process with more intense stretching. Safety At least one spotter is required on all free-weight stations. A spotter is encouraged on all stations to aid the subject, especially through the latter repetitions of maximum force. Injury Prevention It is suggested that exercises be performed as specified only. It is advisable that a spotter be used to correct faulty technique as muscles reach fatigue. Muscle Soreness Slight muscle soreness and tightness are normal 1 to 2 days following weight training. Research indicates that this may be a result of the muscle-rebuilding process. Proper cool down and adequate stretching are encouraged for prevention of soreness. If the soreness is light, gentle stretching and range-of-motion exercise are beneficial, along with elevation and ice for swelling. If there is no swelling, then a warm bath and massage are beneficial. For severe soreness, it is recommended that one use the RICE method: rest, ice, compression, and elevation.
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b. Sample Strength Exercise: Rowing, Low Sit upright, leaning slightly forward from your hips. Keep your back straight and your shoulders down. Pull your shoulders back. Now, if you’re exercising on a machine or are using an exercise band, pull the handles or end of the band back to your upper abdomen over a 2- to 4-second period (in the first 4 weeks, you will not use resistance). Squeeze your shoulder blades together. Hold for 1 to 2 seconds. Now, take about 2 to 4 seconds, return to the starting position, keeping your back stationary. Do 8 to 12 repetitions of this exercise. Be sure to pull back for a full 2 to 4 seconds. Then, take another 2 to 4 seconds to return to the starting position. This exercise works your upper back muscle (rhomboid) and your middle back muscle (latissimus dorsi). Common errors that your child may make include moving shoulders upward, leaning back, moving the head forward, or bending at the wrists. c. Muscular Strength and Endurance Facts: Overload and Stress The body responds to stress in one of two ways: adaptation or breakdown. Muscle adaptation may be referred to as training effect such as an increase in strength, power, endurance or speed. Breakdowns result in overuse syndromes and other injuries. The goal of training programs is to obtain as much training effect as possible without sustaining stress injury. Training Effect Muscles are the engines of the body. Their performance is improved when stress is applied in excess of their present capacity. This is referred to as overload, which results in a training effect specific to the exercise. Injury If stress is excessive, the body’s response is a stress injury or overuse syndrome. This may occur as the result of improper technique, too much force, inadequate rest, poor nutrition, or dehydration. Frequency and Rest In weight training more demanding workouts require more recovery time. Research supports two to three nonconsecutive exercise sessions per week with adequate rest in between. Muscle Specificity Strength Strength is defined as the maximum ability of a muscle or group of muscles to apply or resist force. It is a pure and independent factor from endurance and power. Training for strength results in adaptation of fibers within the muscles. Power Power is defined as performance of work expressed per unit of time. It is dependent on strength because it is the product of strength and speed. (POWER = FORCE × VELOCITY). Training for power exercises must include a rapid speed component specific to the desired goals. Size Increases in muscle area size (hypertrophy) are the result of three factors: 1. Muscle fiber lengthening and widening and possibly an increase in the number of fibers. 2. Increased vascularization (blood flow and capillary development) 3. Fluid retention (edema) in the muscle area due to stress.
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Endurance Endurance is defined as the ability of a muscle to repeatedly develop near maximal force and to sustain repeated contractions. It is dependent on the level of strength and uses mainly aerobic metabolic systems Physical Make-Up Muscle Fiber Composition Muscle fibers are generally classified as slow-twitch or fast-twitch. The percentage of each is genetically determined. Slow-twitch = low intensity, long duration. Fast-twitch = high intensity, short duration. Balance The ultimate goal of weight training is a strong, symmetrical, and balanced physique. This is achieved by training muscles anteriorally and posterially with the same intensity as well as left and right sides. Differences in strength leave the weaker muscles more prone to injury. Speed of Movement Research supports 60 degrees per second or at least 2 seconds for lifting and 2 seconds for lowering. Controlled movement speeds enhance both training safety and training stimulus. Sets and Repetitions Research supports one to three training sets per exercise, dependent on training goals and time availability. Repetitions are dependent to some degree on muscle fiber type. Research supports 8 to 12 repetitions for children < 14 years of age. How to Plan Your Own Resistance Weight-Training Program Allow sufficient time in your routine for an adequate warm up and cool down, as recommended by your instructor. Use this sequence of exercises: • Start with your large muscle groups, preferably leg muscles, and do abdominal exercises at the end of the routine. • Follow with exercises that work the upper body muscles in unison. • Follow these with exercises that isolate specific arm muscles. • Then do another exercise that works upper body muscles in unison and that is different from the earlier exercise. • Do another large muscle group, such as abdominal muscles or oblique (waistline) muscles. • Finally, do exercises for the calf muscles. If you feel pain during the performance of an exercise, stop immediately. This might indicate an existing injury, a structural problem, or improper technique. Ask your exercise instructor for assistance. Remember to monitor your results. This is the only way you can determine whether a particular exercise and its duration and intensity are right for you. Remember that there are genetic factors that determine the results of your exercise program. Respect your own limitations and avoid comparing your progress with that of others. When you are doing your exercise routine, be courteous to others who are performing an exercise circuit. Try to organize your workout so that it does not upset the rhythm of the majority.
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Methods for Stimulating Greater Muscle Development The human body experiences several plateaus in improvement when pursuing any physical activity. Individual genetic factors limit the potential for development of strength and size of muscles. An example of this is that fast-twitch muscles have a greater potential for hypertrophy. At first the body has a “learning effect” caused by nervous system adaptations to strength training. Substantial gains are noticed at this first stage. These gains then level out, and it is necessary to use different methods to develop a greater number of muscle fibers. The key to greater muscle development during a plateau is change. • Change your training exercises • Change your training frequency • Change the relationship between resistance and repetitions Increase your training intensity • “Harder” means “smarter” — not necessarily longer. Strength training is limited by the anaerobic respiratory system (30 to 120 seconds). • High-intensity training • Breakdown training • Assisted training • Super-slow training • Negative training • One-and-one-quarter training And if all else fails, get more sleep (quality rest). At least 7.5 hours per night are necessary; in children < 14 years, 10 hours per night are recommended. Drink more fluids — muscles are 75% water. Obtain better nutrition — a well-balanced diet. Increased protein intake may promote dehydration. Eat smaller meals more frequently. Your muscles get stronger after your workout — during the rebuilding period. This is when proteins are resynthesized, and when connective tissue is rebuilt. Your goal is to exercise the greatest number of muscle fibers per movement, and to exercise those fibers in different movement patterns. d. Creating Indoor Play Areas Verbal cues: Winter always comes, and in most places, that means staying inside. No problem. A little rearranging will do wonders. Transform your child’s bedroom or a room you don’t use much into an “imagination station” (see the program book [2] for further details). Enlist your child’s help to create a fun atmosphere. Pull a few old mattresses into the room so he can jump from one to the next. Bring in a boom box so he or she has plenty of room to dance. Or, if he or she is younger, designate the area for soft balls, hoola-hoops and jump ropes. No child we know can resist a small, indoor trampoline surrounded by fluffy pillows. Hopscotch is always in vogue. Believe it or not, kids still love the game of Twister. You can play too! Or try a piece of technology that actually gets kids out from behind the computer: a power pad. It is connected to both the child’s body and the computer, so when the child moves, it records his actions and shows them on the screen – in the form of abstract images. This can make hours of interesting physical twists and turns, and ends up as techno-art! Enlist your child’s opinions and help and spend as much time as necessary putting the room together so your child wants to be there. Of course, you are invited to do some playing, too, which will invigorate your child to play even more.
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Here’s an idea to act on sooner rather than later: younger children actually enjoy doing household chores. Ask your youngster to help you make the beds in the house, help you transfer clothes from the washer to the dryer, put the dishes in the dishwasher, or water the plants. Even sweeping and vacuuming have a near mystical appeal to them. The goal is to provide as much opportunity as possible for your child to play, move, and burn calories. Always be certain to select activities that are safe for your child’s age and level of fitness. Inside adventure: When the weather’s bad Have you refurbished your house yet so your child can stay active during rainy, cold, and snowy months? There are plenty of places to take your child when cabin fever sets in. Sign him or her up for weekly indoor activities or just go for a 1-day visit when the mood strikes. Gyms/fitness centers: They offer a variety of calorie-burning fun including gymnastics, tumbling, basketball, wrestling, kick boxing or other martial arts, wallclimbing, track, badminton, volleyball, ping pong, and swimming. Don’t forget indoor tennis. Dance studios: Kids are welcome in all kinds of classes including ballet, tap, modern, jazz, hip-hop, line dancing, ballroom dancing, yoga, free movement classes, and other music/dance combination classes. Indoor rinks: Ice skating and roller skating can fill hours of fun on a rainy day Children’s museums: They exist in most cities and provide interesting, educational, and fun activities that keep your child on the move! Indoor nature centers or aquariums offer similar movement opportunities. Restaurants with games: They are popping up all over. Choose those that offer the greatest energy burners, including laser tag and other fast-paced activities. Most have salad bars, so plan on light meals. To set up your imagination station, here are some ideas for older children: • A plastic tub filled with costumes, dress-up clothes, and accessories such as crowns, wands, toy shields, armor, masks, vests, belts, shoes, hats, grass skirts, scarfs, play jewelry, wigs • Boom box with various dance music tapes or CDs • Microphone, drums, toy musical instruments, stage curtains • Puppets, marionettes, magician kits, various stuffed animals • Batons, small flags, pom poms, streamers, hula hoops • Foam mats and wedges, indoor tents, large building blocks or cardboard boxes, bean bag chairs, soft pillows, old blankets, sheets • Hopscotch mat, action games such as Twister, Charades, Simon Says, Follow the Leader • Paddle balls, indoor ball-toss games, bean bags, juggling balls, hacky sack • Kid-safe dart boards or other target games • Indoor basketball hoop and soft foam balls • Jump ropes, skip-it, small kid-safe hand weights, exercise stretch bands. For younger children, try: • Small pull/push toys or plastic wagons • Toy household cleaning items such as brooms, mops, vacuum cleaners, feather dusters • Toy kitchen, restaurant, and accessories • Indoor riding toys.
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Meanwhile, when you’re gathered in front of the television watching your favorite show, don’t forget to stand up and do the “television commercial boogie” whenever the ads come on. You’ll be amazed at how much moving you’ll do to the soundtracks of those endless commercials! And be sure to engage in collective booing when junk-food ads fill the screen. 5. Lesson 5: Family Field Sports — Aerobic Volleyball; Creating Outdoor Play Areas a. Creating Outdoor Fun [2] Verbal cues: Take an inventory of your yard. Is there a swing set? Sandbox? A wading pool? A sprinkler with an attachment for playing with water? If not, get busy! Your child can engage in the great outdoors in so many ways. His age will determine his or her interests. Older children love to climb rope swings or ladders leading to a tree fort in which they can play endlessly. They also enjoy competition, sporting games (basketball, baseball, badminton, croquet, miniature golf), and tag, tag, and more tag! Younger children enjoy playing knights-in-shining-armor with an open field for battle. They like balls of all sizes. Building makeshift houses out of cardboard boxes provides endless adventure. Or they’ll pull their wagons full of their favorite things. Enter into this knowing it may be a process of trial and error. Maybe for your child’s first 6 to 8 years, watching television was her idea of fun. She may have to explore different corners of this new world of activity before she finds the right fit. Bear with her. Your patience will pay off enormously. If you don’t have a yard, find the nearest park. Even older kids enjoy monkey bars, swings, teeter-totters, tunnels, and the wonderful playground equipment so many parks offer. Take her to the grassy area and throw a Frisbee, pitch some baseballs, or ride bikes around the periphery of the park. The only hard and fast rule to all this is to find activities your child likes and do them! 6. Lesson 6: Flexibility, Flex Test I, and Stretch and Flex Class [2] a. Verbal cues: A car runs more efficiently when it is in alignment. The same holds true for the human body. The function of flexibility is to maintain balance. When your child was born, he was in perfect proportion and symmetrical—the left side was identical to the right. The front of the body was in balance with the rear. After years of using one part of the body more than another, imbalances occur. This can result in poor posture, unfit appearance, or injury and pain in a bone or joint. If you overtrain your chest muscles, undertrain your back, and fail to stretch the chest muscles, you will walk around like a gorilla (Instructor demonstrates). Also, your back will begin to hunch and you will resemble an alien from outer space (Instructor demonstrates). However, if your chest is flexible and your back strong, you will appear taller, trimmer, and stronger (Instructor demonstrates proper alignment). Flexibility training, or stretching, is just as important as aerobics and strength training. Inflexible joints and muscles inhibit your child from participating in activities to his or her fullest potential. They can also lead to chronic muscle and joint disorders. If you participate in stretching exercises with your child, you will be helping yourself offset chronic pain and disease, too! Stretching can be done often and almost anywhere. We encourage it during television time. Make sure you arrange the room in which your child watches television so that he or she can sprawl on the floor and perform his or her stretches Be sure your child always stretches after he participates in aerobic or strengthening exercises. This will prevent soreness and possibly even injury. Stretching is also a great way to unwind at the end of the day.
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b. Sample Flex Exercise: Shoulder Stretch Stand with your feet about 18 inches apart. Now, bend your knees slightly. Push your hips forward just a bit. Keep your stomach muscles tight. Inhale as you raise both arms up above your head with your upper arms just ahead of your ears. Interlock your fingers, and turn your hands inside out. Stretch upward at a slight angle forward. Hold this position for 15 to 30 seconds. Lower arms and relax. Repeat this process one more time, holding this position again for 15 to 30 seconds. 7. Lesson 7: Aerobic Exercise and Cardiopulmonary Endurance, Steady State — Monitoring Heart Rate and Aerobic Circuit a. Monitoring Heart Rate — Keeping the Best Pace Verbal cues: Working out at the most efficient and safest pace requires that you monitor your breathing, temperature, and heart rate. While exercising, find a pace at which you can talk without difficulty, your breathing is not too labored, and you don’t get overheated—meaning very hot, lightheaded, and weak. You can monitor your heart rate during an aerobic activity by determining your own individual target heart range (THR) beforehand. Here’s how: 1. Subtract your age from 220. 220 – ______ = ______ 2. To get the low end of your range, multiply your answer by 55%. _____ × .55 = ______. 3. To figure the high end of your range, multiply your answer by 65%. _____ × .65 = _______. 4. Review how to take your heart rate, and the recommended heart rate ranges, in the program book [2] and on the exercise DVD (see Appendix A3.1.1). Aim for the low end of your THR when you first begin exercising, and gradually work up to the higher range. Also, if you have an existing medical condition, work with your doctor to determine the best THR. 8. Lesson 8: Exercise Prescriptions; the Fit Kit Walking Program a. The Fit Kit (Walking for Fun, Health, and Fitness) The Fit Kit was designed especially for children in level 3 (green) or 4 (blue). Children in level 1 (red) or 2 (yellow) should choose an alternate activity this week such as biking or swimming. Verbal cues: Work with your child to develop a walking program that will maintain his goal weight and keep him fit. By participating in this, you’ll burn lots of calories, train your leg and hip muscles, and improve the efficiency of your heart and lungs. Walking is one of the easiest and most convenient ways you can stay active on a daily basis. There may be times you walk with a friend, while at other times you may prefer to do it alone. Either way is fine as long as you keep on truckin’! Follow these steps to healthy walking. • Step 1: Check Up. Check your shoes, clothes, and walking route. Get a new pair of walking shoes about every 6 months. Don’t try to save money by wearing them longer. These are your precious feet you’re working with! Clothes: In summer, choose loose-fitting, all-cotton tee shirts and tank tops. In winter, dress in layers of warm, soft, loose-fitting clothes, woolen mittens, and a hat. Walking Route: Sketch a map of your planned walking route on paper. Make sure to include landmarks, phone locations, water stops, and favorite scenic spots. Post your map on the refrigerator. Always tell someone where you will be walking if it is different from your typical route. • Step 2: Form a Plan of Action. Write a 1-week walking schedule and put it into your daily calendar.
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• Step 3: Get Ready: Choose an appropriate warm up that includes dynamic stretches (Appendix A3.3. Stretch while moving); don’t do any static stretches without warming up first. Wait until after your walking to do static stretches. • Step 4: Put Your Best Foot Forward. Walk slowly at first, swinging your arms naturally. Pick up the pace after a few minutes to a comfortable, moderate level. Remember, if you start to breathe too rapidly, slow down until you are going at the pace that is right for you. Use the chart in the program book [2] to calculate your walking speed. • Step 5: Cool Down and Stretch (Appendix A3.3). Reduce your pace during the last 5 to 10 minutes of the walk. Finish up with at least one stretch of each major muscle group. Refer to the program book and DVD [2] for proper technique. • Step 6: Keep a Walking Diary. Use the form located in the program book [2]. • Step 7: Weigh the Outcome of Your Walk. Determine how many calories you burned during your walk by using the chart provided. First, determine the distance you walked. Then figure out your speed (miles per hour) from the “Your MilesPer-Hour Chart” in the program book [2]. • Step 8: Take the Next Step. Many people find walking enjoyable once they get into the habit. If this is true for you, consider joining a local club or entering a fun walk or run. Check with your local recreation, church, or school organizations for upcoming opportunities. This is a great way to meet new friends who also love to walk and be active. 9. Lesson 9: Review Muscular Strength and Endurance: Pull Your Own Weight Series a. Verbal cues: Let’s say you are out of town visiting relatives or on a family vacation. By now, you love your new, toned, beautiful body and you are aching to do some strengthening exercises. The “Pull Your Own Weight” exercises work the major muscle groups, and you do not need a gym or special equipment to do them. Instead you will use your own body weight to tone and strengthen your muscles. Be sure to do them slowly, and be sure to fully extend and contract your muscles to get full strengthening and toning benefit. b. Sample Exercises Modified Standing Push-up Stand two to three feet from a wall, sturdy table, or chair, with your feet together and your hands extended forward. Place your hands on the wall or grasp the table or chair, as you lean your body forward at a 45 degree angle to the floor. Slowly, bend your elbows and lower your chest until it touches the edge of the table or chair. Now, push with your hands, extending your arms, and return to the original position. Keep your head in line with your body. Keep your legs straight and extended throughout the exercise. Repeat 8 to 12 times. You are training the chest muscles (pectorals) and the back of the upper arms (triceps). Modified Lunge Stand with your feet about 6 to 8 inches apart and grasp the back of a sturdy chair with both of your hands. Step forward with your right leg approximately 18 to 36 inches. Keep your head, shoulders, and hips in a straight line. Bend your knees and lower your left knee onto floor. Do not allow the right knee to move in front of your right foot. Push the heel of the right foot into the floor as you lift and return to the starting position. Repeat with your left leg forward. Repeat 8 to 12 times on each leg. You are working the buttocks muscles (gluteus), the back of upper leg (hamstrings), and the front upper leg (quads). 10. Lesson 10: See Park Day — Outdoor Play in Chapter 20.
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A3.4 TABLE OF FOOD PORTION AND UNITS YOUR DAILY NUTRITION PLAN Verbal Cues To make it easier, we have assigned daily food portion guides for each calorie level. Instead of counting calories, all you have to do is eat a specified number of units (or portions) daily from the carbohydrate, meat and protein substitute, and fat food groups — not to exceed your calorie goal. Refer to Chapter 12 by Schumacher et al. and the program book [2] to find the daily portion allowance for your child’s calorie goal. Daily Food Prescription My Daily Calorie Goal: I am allowed to eat: ______ Carbohydrate units per day
______ calories per day
These include • Starches/breads • Fruits • Milk/dairy ______ Meat and protein substitutes per day ______ Fats per day ______ Unlimited vegetables Keeping Track Using the Food Checklist Verbal cues: To help keep track of your child’s daily food intake, use the Aerobic Activity and Food Checklist found in Appendix A3.10. Each small box on the checklist represents one unit. Check the appropriate boxes for every food or drink your child consumes. For example: Turkey Sandwich Two slices wheat bread Check two carbohydrate boxes 2 ounces sliced turkey Check two meat/substitute boxes Lettuce/tomato Check vegetable box 1 cup skim milk Check one carbohydrate box
Checking the boxes will help you practice staying within your child’s daily recommended portion intake. Don’t worry if you have to “guesstimate” at times, especially if your child is away from home. Following a tight calorie level is not the goal, but practicing and “reteaching” the body portion control (until it becomes a habit) is. Food Portion and Unit Lists Keeping track of portions ensures that your child is eating the right amounts of foods to achieve the weight loss calorie goal. Refer to the chart below for food group portions and their specific food units.
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Food Portion and Unit Lists Common Foods
Portion
Carbohydrate Units
Starches Breads Bread “Lite Bread” Bagel Bagel English muffin Hamburger or hot dog bun Dinner roll Muffin Muffin Waffle/pancake Tortillas
1 slice (1 ounce) 2 slices Medium (2 ounce) Large (4 ounce) Whole Whole 1 (small-1 ounce) Small (2 ounce) Large (4 ounce) 1 regular
1 1 2 4 2 2 1 2 4 1
1 cup
1 carb
½ cup (1 packet, instant) ⅔ cup (1 packet instant)
1 carb 2 carbs
½ cup (cooked) ½ cup (cooked) ½ cup (cooked) 1 cup (cooked) ¼ cup (cooked)
1 1 1 1 1
1 ounce (1 small bag) 1
1 carb 2 carbs
15 3 squares 6 crackers 1 granola bar 3 cups (popped) 1 ounce (small bag)
1 1 1 2 1 1
8 small 2 large
1 carb 2 carbs
Starchy Vegetables Corn Peas Potatoes (sweet, white) Squash (acorn, butternut)
½ cup ½ cup 1 medium ¼ cup
1 1 2 1
Fruits Fresh fruit Canned fruit
Medium (or about 1 cup ) ½ cup
1 carb 1 carb
Cereals Dry (breakfast) cereal Hot cereal (oatmeal, cream of wheat, grits) Plain Fruit/flavored Grains Pasta Rice Beans (red, navy, lima) Lentils Stuffing Snacks Chips (reduced-fat) Cereal-fruit bar Crackers Animal Graham Wheat/saltine-type Granola bar Popcorn (reduced-fat) Pretzels Rice cakes Small Large
carb carb carbs carbs carbs carbs carb carbs carbs carb
carb carb carb carb carb
carb carb carb carbs carb carb
carb carb carbs carb
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Common Foods Dried fruit: Dried apricots Dried figs Dried prunes Raisins Fruit juice: Apple juice Cranberry juice Grape juice Grapefruit juice
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Portion
Carbohydrate Units
4 2 3 ¼ cup (small box)
1 1 1 1
carb carb carb carb
1 1 1 1
2 3 3 2
carbs carbs carbs carbs
cup cup cup cup
(8 (8 (8 (8
ounces) ounces) ounces) ounces)
Dairy* Milk (skim/reduced-fat) 1 cup (8 ounces) Soy milk 1 cup (8 ounces) Yogurt: Plain 1 cup Fruit/regular sweetened 1 cup Fruit/artificially sweetened 1 cup Frozen yogurt ½ cup (4-ounce “kiddie-size) Reduced-fat ice cream ½ cup Cheese, reduced-fat 1-ounce slice Cheese, regular 1-ounce slice *Choose dairy products containing less than 3 to 5 grams of fat per unit. *Choose dairy products containing less than 25 to 30 grams of “sugar” on the label.
1 carb 1 carb 1 2 1 1 1 1 1
carb carbs carb carb carb protein (no carbohydrates) protein + 1 fat
Vegetables (lower-carbohydrate) Unlimited Meat, Poultry, Seafood and Protein Substitutes Beef: Flank, round, sirloin, tenderloin Poultry (skinless) Chicken Turkey Pork: Canadian bacon, chops (fat trimmed), ham, Loin, tenderloin Seafood: Fish (all) Shellfish (all) Tuna fish (canned in water) Cold cuts (less than 3 to 5 grams of fat per ounce) Reduced-fat cheese (less than 3 to 5 grams of fat per ounce) Regular cheese Eggs: Egg with yolk Egg substitute Vegetable patties Peanut butter Tofu
1 ounce
1 protein
1 breast (about 4 ounces) 1 drumstick (about 2 ounces)
4 proteins 2 proteins
1 ounce 1 ounce
1 protein 1 protein
1 ounce 6 shrimp ½ cup 1 ounce 1 ounce
1 1 2 1 1
1 ounce
1 protein (+ 1 fat)
1 whole egg ½ cup 1 patty (about 3 ounces) 1 tablespoon 4 ounces
1 2 2 1 2
protein protein proteins protein protein
protein (+ 1 fat) proteins proteins protein (+ 1 fat) proteins
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Portion
Carbohydrate Units
¼ avocado 1 tablespoon 1 tablespoon No limit 1 tablespoon No limit 1 tablespoon 1 tablespoon No limit
2 3 1 0 1 0 3 1 0
About ¼ cup (4 tablespoons) 1 teaspoon
3 fats
1 tablespoon 1 tablespoon About 10 olives 2 tablespoons No limit 2 tablespoons No limit
3 3 1 1 0 1 0
Condiments/Seasonings BBQ sauce Catsup Herbs and spices Horseradish Hot sauce Lemon/lime juice Mayonnaise (regular) Mayonnaise (reduced-fat) Mayonnaise (fat-free) Mustard Pickles Salsa Soy sauce (lower-sodium is better) Taco sauce Teriyaki sauce Worcestershire sauce
2–3 tablespoons No limit No limit No limit No limit No limit 1 tablespoon 1 tablespoon No limit No limit No limit No limit No limit No limit No limit No limit
0 0 0 0 0 0 3 fats 1 fat 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Entrees/Soups Casseroles: Hamburger Helper™, Lasagna, Stew
1 cup
2 carbs 1 protein 2 fats
Chili
1 cup
2 carbs 1 protein 3 fats
Fats Avocado* Butter/Margarine (regular) Cream cheese, lite-Neufchatel Cream cheese, fat-free* Margarine, reduced-fat Margarine, fat-free* Mayonnaise, regular Mayonnaise, reduced-fat Mayonnaise, fat-free* Nuts/Seeds:* Peanuts, cashews Almonds Pine nuts, pumpkin, sunflower seeds Oils: Canola, olive, peanut* Corn, safflower, soybean, sunflower Olives Salad dressing, reduced-fat Salad dressing, fat-free* Sour cream, reduced-fat Sour cream, fat-free*
fats fats fat fat fats fat
1 fat fats fats fat fat fat
*Better choices
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Common Foods
Portion
Carbohydrate Units
Chinese stir-fry
1 cup
2 proteins low-starch vegetables as desired 1 to 3 fats
Italian meat sauce
1 cup
2 proteins 2 to 3 vegetables
Jambalaya
1 cup
2 carbs 1 protein 2 to 3 fats
Macaroni and cheese
1 cup
2 carbs 1 protein 3 fats
Ravioli/SpaghettiOs®
1 cup
2 carbs 1 protein 1 vegetable
Soups: Chicken noodle Vegetable Cream or cheese (regular)
1 cup 1 cup 1 cup
1 2 1 4 1 1 1 1 1
Cream or cheese (reduced-fat)
1 cup
Chunky
1 cup
carb vegetables carb fats carb fat carb vegetable fat
Fast Food Chicken nuggets/tenders
6 nuggets or 4 tenders
2 proteins 1 carb 3 fats
French fries
“Kids Meal”-size
1 carb 2 fats
French fries
Small
2 carbs 3 fats
French fries
Medium
3 carbs 4 fats
French fries
Large
4 carbs 5 fats
Hamburger
Small-“Kids Meal” or “Junior” size
1½ carbs 2 proteins 2 fats
Hamburger
Regular
2 carbs 3 proteins 3 fats
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Common Foods
Portion
Carbohydrate Units
Pizza, thin crust
1 slice, large
2 carbs 2 proteins 3 fats
Taco
1, regular
1 carb 2 proteins 3 fats
Taco
1, soft
1 carb 2 proteins 1 fat
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A3.5 THE FOOD GROUPS Verbal Cues The Trim Kids Nutrition Plan teaches portion control by using a food unit or portion-control system* as the guide. Foods are grouped into different food groups according to their nutrient compositions. The food groups are Meat/protein substitutes Vegetables Carbohydrates, including starches and breads, fruits, and milk/dairy products Fats Every food falls into one of these groups and is assigned a “unit” or a specified portion. Each food group unit provides similar amounts of calories. It safe to assume, for instance, that one unit of any fruit has about 60 calories and contains no fat. Or, one unit of any lean meat has about 25 to 50 calories and 1 to 3 g fat. Knowing this allows you and your child to make informed decisions about what and how much food he or she can eat. Let’s look a bit more closely at each food group to learn more about their portions and nutritional values. Meats and Protein Substitutes This food group includes most animal products and other foods that are good sources of protein. In general, these foods contain mostly protein and few carbohydrates. A unit in this food group generally equals1 ounce or 0.25 cup. One 3-ounce chicken breast, for example, equals three protein units (we will often refer to this group as “proteins” for short). Because some animal products can be very high in fat, we divide this group into three parts based on the number of fat and calories in each: lean proteins, medium-fat proteins, and high-fat proteins. Take time to review the lean protein choices listed below. Lean proteins are the best choices. These contain no more than 2 or 3 grams of fat and 25 to 50 calories per ounce. Because they are so low in fat — especially seafood, egg substitutes (whites), vegetable protein substitutes — consuming a few additional units of these foods, especially if you are hungry, is allowed. Some examples of lean proteins include Lean beef (round, sirloin, flank) Vegetable protein substitutes (e.g., veggie or soy burgers), tofu Ham or Canadian bacon Veal chops or roasts Skinless chicken or turkey Seafood (the fat in fish and seafood, called omega-3 fatty acids, has been linked to reducing some diseases, especially heart disease) Very low-fat cheeses and cold cuts (containing less than three to five grams of fat per ounce) Egg whites or egg substitutes Sidebar: Soy Protein Eating more soy protein helps lower LDL, or bad cholesterol levels. Many soy protein–based foods are also good sources of dietary fiber, which means they are really healthy food! They also contain no cholesterol. Replace some animal proteins (meat/poultry and dairy) with soy protein substitutes as desired. Good sources of soy protein include * Food groups are based on the American Dietetic Association and American Diabetes Association food exchange lists. The calorie assignments of some groups have been modified to offer a general calorie range rather than a specific calorie level.
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Soy milk Soy/vegetable meat and cheese substitutes Soy nuts Tofu Medium-fat proteins and meat substitutes contain no more than 5 to 6 g fat and 75 calories per ounce. Eat them less often than lean meats. Examples include Most beef (ground, roasts, or steaks) Pork, lamb, and veal cutlets Low-fat cheeses and cold cuts (containing about 5 g or more of fat per ounce) Whole eggs (egg yolks are high in cholesterol) High-fat proteins contain 8 to 10 g fat and 100 calories per ounce. Because of their high fat and caloric content, avoid these foods as much as possible. They include Deep-fat fried meat or meat substitute Prime beef (ribs, corned beef) Pork sausage or spare ribs Bacon Regular cheeses Luncheon meats (bologna, salami, liver, cheese) Regular hot dogs, Vienna sausages Sidebar: Peanut Butter Peanut butter is a good protein substitute, although it is fairly high in fat. The good news is that it is a monounsaturated fat and may be eaten in moderation — usually not to exceed 1 or 2 tablespoons. Choose peanut butters that contain no added hydrogenated vegetable oils. Vegetables The vegetable group includes all nonstarchy vegetables and contains on average less than 1 g fat and fewer than 25 calories per serving. These vegetables are also low in carbohydrates (less than 5 g per serving) and, thus, calories. Therefore, your child may usually eat as much of them as desired. These include Artichokes, asparagus, green beans Bean sprouts, beets, broccoli Brussels sprouts, cabbage, carrots Cauliflower, eggplant, greens, hearts of palm Okra, onions, pea pods Peppers, spinach, tomatoes Tomato sauce Tomato or vegetable juice Salad greens Summer or zucchini squash Vegetable soup We recommend that your child consume a minimum of five servings per day of fruits and vegetables. Not only are these foods naturally fat-free and packed with vitamins and minerals, but eating an abundance of them may decrease the risk of certain types of cancer, heart disease, and stroke.
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Carbohydrate-Containing Food Groups: Starches/Breads, Fruits, and Milk/Dairy Groups The following food groups contain carbohydrates and will be grouped together as “carbohydrate food units.” These include starches/breads, fruits, and milk/dairy foods. These food groups may be mixed and matched as desired, but try not to exceed the Daily Food Prescription in the program book [2] for carbohydrate units specified for your calorie level. Starches and Breads In general, one carbohydrate unit of a starch or bread is one-half cup of cereal, grain, or pasta, or a 1-ounce slice of bread, and contains about 80 to 100 calories per unit. Here is a useful portion control hint: An average 9-inch plate equals about 2 cups or four carbohydrate units. If you choose starches or breads with added fat (oil, butter, etc.) make sure to count the fat portions as part of your daily intake, too. Some items in this food group include Cereals (those containing greater than 3 grams of fiber are better choices) Pancakes, waffles, muffins Grains, pasta Beans, peas, lentils Corn, potatoes Breads, bagels, tortillas (whole-wheat/whole-grain choices are better) Crackers (wheat), popcorn, pretzels Fruits This group includes fresh fruit and unsweetened canned fruit and fruit juices. (Fresh or canned fruit is a better choice than fruit juice.) One unit is generally equal to one medium-sized piece of fresh fruit or ½ cup of canned fruit or fruit juice. Each unit contains less than ½ g fat and about 60 to 90 calories. Some items in this food group include Apple, applesauce (unsweetened), banana, berries (any kind) Fruit cocktail, grapes, grapefruit, kiwi Mandarin oranges, mango, melons (any kind), nectarines Oranges, peaches, pears, pineapple Tangerine, watermelon Dried fruits such as figs, dates, raisins Fruit juices (in moderation) Milk and Dairy Products This food group includes skim and very low fat milk and milk products. One unit generally equals 8 ounces (1 cup) of milk or ½ to 1 cup of milk products and averages 90 to 120 calories per unit. Choose milk and dairy products that are lower in fat (containing less than 3 to 5 g fat per serving) to keep the calories lower. Some items in this food group include Skim and very low-fat (1–1½%) milk Soy milk Nonfat and very low fat yogurt Nonfat and very low fat ice cream, pudding, frozen yogurt Fats Foods in this group contain mainly fat and very little carbohydrate or protein. Fats must be counted in addition to carbohydrate and protein units according to the Trim Kids Nutrition Plan Portion
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Control Chart in the program book [2]. Each serving in this group averages 50 calories and 5 g fat. Some items in this food group include Better Choices: Oil (olive, canola, peanut), olives Nuts Avocado Other Choices: Lite margarine (look for liquid vegetable oil as the first ingredient) Reduced-fat salad dressings (consume fat-free versions as desired — “free food”) Reduced-fat mayonnaise (consume fat-free versions as desired — “free food”) Light whipped topping (2 tablespoons) Less Healthy Choices (saturated fat): Regular margarine (containing hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated vegetable oils) Butter Bacon Sour cream (consume fat-free versions as desired — “free food”) Cream cheese (consume fat-free versions as desired — “free food”) Half & half Free Foods: “Anytime” Foods and Beverages When your child focuses on what she can eat rather than on what she cannot, she will be more apt to want and choose those foods. Below is a list of “free foods,” which means she can eat them without having to worry about measuring portions. They contain none to very little fat and fewer than 20 calories per serving. Sugar-free beverages: Water — the best beverage! Mineral Water Club soda Sugar-free drink mixes* Sugar-free sodas* Broth/bouillon Condiments: Fat-free butter substitutes such as butter/olive oil–flavored nonfat, nonstick cooking spray and liquid butter substitutes Fat-free cream cheese Fat-free mayonnaise Fat-free salad dressings Fat-free sour cream Flavoring extracts (vanilla, almond, peppermint, lemon) BBQ sauce Catsup Horseradish Herbs/spices/seasoning blends (any kind)** * Check with your health care team about using artificial sweeteners. ** Although salt contains no calories, don’t go overboard. Substitute lower-sodium versions when possible.
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Hot pepper/Tabasco sauce Lemons/limes Mustard (any kind) Pickles (any kind) Powdered salad dressing/soup packets (mixed with fat-free sour cream to make a dip) Seasoning (chili, stir-fry, taco, etc.) packets Salsa Soy sauce (lower-sodium preferred) Teriyaki sauce Taco sauce Vinegar (any kind) Worcestershire sauce Sweet tooth*: Sugar-free gum Diet (sugar-free) Jello Sugar-free popsicles Low-sugar jelly/jam and fruit spreads Low-sugar pancake syrup All vegetables in vegetable category (see vegetable list above)
* Check with your health care team about using artificial sweeteners.
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A3.6 FULL MEAL PLANS, RECIPES FROM TRIM KIDS [2] Week 3 Weekly Menu Snacks (one to two choices per day)
Breakfast
Lunch
Dinner
Monday
Cold cereal with fiber (1 cup) Wheat toast (one slice) with low-sugar jelly Banana Milk (1 cup)
Peanut butter (1 tablespoon) sandwich on wheat bread Grapes (1/2 cup) Milk (1 cup)
Roast beef (two to three slices) Mashed potatoes (1/2 cup) with reduced-fat gravy (or one baked potato) Low-fat broccoli and cheese Tossed salad as desired (with 1–2 teaspoons olive oil or reducedfat salad dressing) Water or calorie-free beverage
Celery sticks with reducedfat cream cheese (2 tablespoons) or peanut butter (1 tablespoon) Cereal with fiber (1 cup) and skim milk Cereal-fruit bar (1) Reduced-fat chips (about 15 chips or 1 ounce) with fat-free dip or salsa Wheat crackers (6) with reduced-fat cheese (2 slices)
Tuesday
One-half English muffin with reducedfat cream cheese, 1 tablespoon peanut butter, or low-sugar jam/jelly Scrambled egg substitute cooked in nonstick cooking spray (optional) Strawberries (1 cup) Milk (1 cup)
Fast food meal: 6” submarine sandwich (turkey, ham, chicken breast, or tuna with lite mayo) Baked chips (1 single serving bag) Water or calorie-free beverage
Oven-fried chicken (about 1 breast-size) Brown rice (1/2 cup) with fat-free liquid butter substitute Mixed vegetables Fruit cocktail (1/2 cup) Milk (1 cup)
Lite cream cheese (2 tablespoons) Peanut butter (1 tablespoon) Hot cocoa made with skim milk (1 cup) English muffin or bagel “pizza” (1/2 muffin with tomato/pizza sauce and reduced-fat cheese)
Wednesday
Oatmeal (1 cup) with raisins and walnuts (2 tablespoons each) and 1 teaspoon brown sugar or honey (or reduced-sugar pancake syrup) if desired Milk (1 cup)
Whole-wheat pita (1/2 pita) with tuna or chicken salad (made with reduced-fat mayo) and vegetables Carrot and celery sticks with fat-free dip Fresh fruit of choice Milk (½–1 cup)
Open roast beef sandwich (leftover roast) made with one to two slices of wheat bread, 2 to 3 slices of roast beef with reduced-fat gravy Cooked/steamed vegetables of choice Tossed salad with 1–2 teaspoons olive oil or reduced-fat dressing Milk (½–1 cup)
Fruit (1 piece fresh, 1/2 cup canned, or 3 tablespoons dried) Frozen fruit bar (1) Fruit juice “spritzer” 3 ounces fruit juice mixed with 5 ounces club soda or sparkling water Graham crackers (3 squares) Teddy Grahams (1/2 cup)
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Thursday
Cheese toast: 1–2 slices wheat bread with reduced-fat cheese, melted Fruit yogurt (1/2 cup) Orange juice-calcium fortified (1/2 cup)
Chef salad with ham and/or turkey slices/cubes and reduced-fat dressing (2 tablespoons) Small rice cakes (eight) Milk (1 cup)
Restaurant: Mexican meal: • Soft tacos or fajitas — chicken or beef (2) with salsa • Black beans (1/2 cup) or • Mexican rice (1/2 cup) • Tortilla chips (15) with salsa Water or calorie-free beverage
Nuts (2 tablespoons) Oatmeal (1/2 cup) Oatmeal cookies (2 small) Popcorn (3 to 5 cups) Reduced-fat pudding or ice cream (1/2 cup) Quesidilla (1 tortilla) With melted, reduced-fat cheese, salsa and fat-free sour cream
Friday
Wheat toast (one to two slices) with fatfree liquid butter substitute and low sugar jelly Scrambled egg substitute cooked with nonfat butterflavored cooking spray (optional) Turkey bacon (three) or “veggie” breakfast sausage links (two) Sliced, fresh tomato Milk (1 cup)
Wheat crackers (12) with reduced-fat sliced cheese Vegetable soup Fat-free pudding (1/2 cup) Water or calorie-free beverage
Tuna noodle bake (1 cup) Carrots (cooked with fat-free liquid butter substitute) Tossed salad with 1–2 teaspoons olive oil or reduced-fat dressing Fruit salad (1 cup) Milk (½–1 cup)
Rice cakes (10 small or 2 large) Sandwich on wheat bread (1/2) with turkey, tuna with lite mayo or reduced fat cheese Soup: vegetable or chicken noodle (2 cups) Trail mix (4 tablespoons) Yogurt, regular or frozen (4–6 ounces) Raw vegetables with fat-free dip (unlimited)
Saturday
Whole-grain waffle (one) with reducedsugar syrup Cottage cheese (1/2 cup) and canned pineapple or peaches (1/2 cup) Orange juice-calcium fortified (1/2 cup)
English muffin “pizza” — whole English muffin with tomato sauce (any kind) and reducedfat cheese Popcorn (about 3 cups popped) Strawberries (1 cup) or grapes (1/2 cup) Milk (½–1 cup)
Seasoned lentils (1 cup) Brown rice (1/2 cup) Creamed spinach Green salad with 1–2 teaspoons olive oil or reduced-fat salad dressing Water or calorie-free beverage
Sunday
Yogurt shake: 1 cup yogurt 1 cup frozen or fresh strawberries ½ banana (optional) ice Skim or soy milk as needed if a “thinner” consistency shake is desired
Low-fat chicken parmesan (about 1 breast-size) Noodles (1/2 cup cooked) Garlic bread (1 slice) Steamed/cooked vegetables of choice Green salad with 1–2 teaspoons olive oil or reduced-fat dressing Water or calorie-free beverage
Leftover night
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Week 3 Recipes Low-Fat Broccoli and Cheese 2 small (or 1 large) bunches fresh broccoli, cut into bite-size pieces 1 can reduced-fat cream of mushroom soup ½ can skim milk or chicken broth 1½ to 2 cups (6–8 ounces) reduced-fat shredded cheddar or American cheese Salt, pepper to taste Preheat oven to 375 degrees. In a casserole dish, combine all ingredients. Bake uncovered for 30 to 40 minutes. Top with bread crumbs and spray with nonfat butter spray prior to baking if desired. Microwave directions: Microwave the broccoli until just tender (about 3 to 5 minutes). Add remaining ingredients and microwave (on medium-high) for another 5 minutes. Nutrition Analysis: Vegetable Group: No limit (½ cup = 45 calories, 1–3 g fat) Oven-Fried Chicken Chicken breasts, skin removed Salt or salt substitute and pepper to taste 1 cup egg substitute Italian seasoned breadcrumbs Nonfat butter-flavored spray Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Season the chicken breasts. Dip the chicken breasts into the egg substitute and roll in the bread crumbs (redip and roll in the bread crumbs again for a thicker crust). Spray with the butter-flavored spray and place on a cookie sheet or baking pan. Bake for 45 to 50 minutes. Nutrition Analysis: 1 breast: 3–4 protein units, ½ carbohydrate unit (145 calories, 5 g fat) Tuna Noodle Bake 3 to 4 cups cooked macaroni (or your favorite type of noodles) 1 can reduced-fat cream of mushroom or celery soup ½ can skim milk ¼ cup fat-free mayonnaise 2 teaspoons mustard 1 cup (4 ounces) reduced-fat shredded American or cheddar cheese 1 to 2 cans water-packed tuna, drained 1 cup reduced-fat potato chips, crushed (optional) Preheat oven to 375 degrees. In a casserole dish, mix all of the ingredients except the chips. Sprinkle with the crushed chips (or bread crumbs) and spray lightly with nonfat liquid butter spray if desired. Bake uncovered for 40 to 45 minutes. Nutrition Analysis: 1 cup: 2 carbohydrate units, 1 protein, 1 fat (200 calories, 7 g fat) Seasoned Lentils 1 pound dried lentils, sorted and rinsed 4 to 5 cups water Chicken, ham, beef or vegetable bouillon cubes (3 to 4) Bay leaf (2) — optional
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In a saucepan, combine lentils, bouillion, and bay leaves. Bring to a boil and simmer (uncovered) for about 15 to 20 minutes, until just tender*. Drain and remove the bay leaves. Salt and season with a little hot sauce as desired. Can also spray with the nonfat butter-flavored pump spray. Mix with the cooked lentils (optional): Mushroom/Onion Sauté ½ pound fresh mushrooms (washed and sliced) 1 medium onion (chopped) 2 teaspoons olive oil Butter-flavored spray ¼ teaspoon hot sauce (optional) In a skillet, sauté the mushrooms and onions on medium heat in 2 teaspoons olive oil and butter-flavored spray enough to coat the skillet until tender (about 15 minutes). Hint: Cook the onions for about 5 minutes before adding the mushrooms, as the onions take a bit longer to soften. Toss with the cooked, drained lentils. Season with salt and hot sauce as desired. * Be careful not to overcook the lentils, as they will become mushy.
OR Cheesy Tomato Lentils 1 large can diced tomatoes, drained 2 cups shredded, reduced-fat cheese (we like the American or cheddar flavor) ½ cup of the lentil-broth water ½ teaspoon hot sauce (optional) In a saucepan, combine these ingredients with the cooked lentils and heat through. Nutrition Analysis: 1 cup: 2 carbohydrate units (160–180 calories) Creamed Spinach 2 packages frozen spinach, defrosted and drained 1 cup fat-free sour cream (more if you like it creamier) 2 tablespoons fat-free mayonnaise ¼ teaspoon salt or salt substitute ¼ teaspoon hot sauce (optional) 1 to 2 teaspoons finely chopped jalepeno pepper (optional) In a saucepan, heat the spinach in butter-flavored spray and 2 teaspoons olive oil. Add the remaining ingredients and heat through. To make a “cheesy” creamed spinach, add ½ to 1 cup reduced-fat shredded cheese (American, cheddar, or mozzarella). Nutrition Analysis: Vegetable group: No limit (1/2 cup = 35–40 calories, 0 g fat) Low-Fat Chicken Parmesan 6 skinless, boneless chicken breasts 1 cup egg substitute Italian-seasoned bread crumbs Reduced-fat (part-skim) mozzarella cheese slices (6)
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1 jar spaghetti sauce (your favorite brand) ½ cup parmesan cheese Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Dip the chicken breasts in the egg and roll in the breadcrumbs. Lay the breaded chicken breast slices in a baking pan that has been sprayed with olive oil or butter-flavored non-stick cooking spray. Bake uncovered for 20 to 25 minutes*. Remove from the oven and top each chicken breast with one slice of mozzarella cheese. Cover with the spaghetti sauce and sprinkle with Parmesan cheese. Bake for another 15 to 20 minutes or until heated through. Nutrition Analysis: 1 breast: 4 protein, ½ carbohydrate (180 calories, 7–8 g fat) * Important: Bake the coated chicken breast first as instructed before adding the cheese and sauce to ensure a chicken coating that is not soggy.
Week 3 Weekly Shopping List Fruits
Vegetables
Meat/Deli
Dry/Can
Apples Banana Grapes Strawberries Misc. fruits for snacks
Broccoli (two bunches) Carrot/celery sticks Salad greens: Lettuce, tomato Cucumbers, etc Misc. vegetables for snacks
Beef roast Chicken breasts, skinless, boneless (buy a “family pack” — enough to make two recipes during the week) Ham (or preferred coldcut) slices Turkey bacon
Oatmeal Breakfast cereal (fiber content should be more than 2–3 g per serving) Bread crumbs, Italian-seasoned Macaroni (or preferred noodles) for the tuna noodle casserole Brown rice Lentils (one bag, dried) Beef gravy mix (package) Reduced-fat cream of mushroom soup Tuna (water-packed) — extra cans Reduced-fat pudding, diet Jello Pineapple, fruit cocktail, or other fruit (can) Raisins
Dairy Case
Frozen Food Section
Breads/Misc.
Staples
Milk (skim, 1½% or soy milk) Egg substitute/Eggs Reduced-fat/part-skim cheese slices (<5 g fat per ounce/slice) Reduced-fat shredded cheese (extra) Fruit yogurt Calcium-fortified orange or fruit juice Cottage cheese Fat-free sour cream
Mixed vegetables Spinach, chopped (2 boxes) Mashed potatoes Waffle (whole-grain is better) Frozen strawberries
Wheat bread English muffin Whole-wheat pita bread French or Italian bread (to make the garlic bread during the week) Reduced-fat popcorn Baked (less than 3 grams of fat) chips
Reduced-fat/very low fat (<3 g fat per serving) mayonnaise Reduced-fat/very low fat (<3–5 g fat per serving) salad dressings Catsup, mustard, BBQ sauce, pickles (regular versions OK) Reduced-sugar syrup, low-sugar or all-fruit jelly Peanut butter (no added hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated vegetable oils) Nuts Oil (olive, canola, peanut), Nonfat cooking spray, Nonfat liquid butter (dairy section) Lite margarine (first ingredient should be liquid vegetable oil — not hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated oil)
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Week 3 Portion Control/Food Record Practice Don’t forget to use Aerobic Activity and Food Checklist (Appendix 3.1 and program book [2]) to help keep track of your daily intake. Let’s practice portion control checks for 1 day. THURSDAY Breakfast: Cheese toast (1–2 slices): Yogurt (1/2 cup or 4-oz.) Orange juice (1/2 cup)
1–2 carbohydrates (bread), 2 proteins , 1–2 fats (cheese, 0 fats if using fat-free cheese) 1 carbohydrate 1 carbohydrate
Lunch: Chef salad: Vegetables-as desired Reduced-fat dressing (2 tablespoons) Rice cakes (8–10 small) Milk (1 cup)
1–2 fats (0 if fat-free) 1 carbohydrate 1 carbohydrate
Dinner: Soft taco or Fajitas (2) Black beans (1/2 cup) Tortilla chips (15) Salsa
2 carbohydrates (tortillas), 2–3 proteins (meat/chicken), vegetables — as desired 1 carbohydrate + 0–2 fats if oil is used 1 carbohydrate + 2 fats Vegetable — as desired
Sample Snacks: Cherry tomatoes Reduced-fat pudding cup
Vegetable — as desired 1 carbohydrate
Total Thursday food units:
2–3 proteins (ham, turkey, reduced-fat cheese), 1–2 fats
10 carbohydrates 7–8 proteins 6 fats Vegetables — as desired
A3.6.1 LOW-CALORIE PIZZA RECIPE Light bread (40 calories per slice) No-sugar-added tomato sauce Fat-free mozzarella cheese Italian seasoning Low-fat pizza toppings: ground turkey (cooked) or vegetables Spread bread with tomato sauce and sprinkle with Italian seasoning to taste. Top each piece of bread with ¼ cup of the cheese and the low-fat toppings. Place pizza on a broiler pan sprayed with nonstick cooking spray. Broil approximately 5 minutes or until the cheese is melted. Nutrition Information Yield: 1 serving = 1 pizza Exchange(s): 1 light bread exchange, 1 meat/protein, 1 vegetable Per Serving Calories 80 Protein 8 g Carbohydrate g Fat 1 g
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A3.7 CALCIUM: THE BONE BUILDER One of the most important minerals for our bodies — and the one that is most lacking — is calcium. More than half of America’s children and adolescents don’t consume the calcium they need. Children should consume between 800 and 1300 mg per day, and teenagers need to boost their intake to 1500 mg per day. Many foods contain calcium, but dairy products supply the most abundant amounts. Dairy products also serve up much-needed vitamin D, which helps the body to absorb calcium. If your child doesn’t routinely consume three to four servings of dairy foods daily, chances are good that he isn’t meeting his recommended daily allowance. But don’t worry — adding calcium doesn’t have to mean adding calories or pounds: nonfat, low-fat, and skim versions of dairy products contain similar amounts of calcium as their higher-fat cousins. Conduct a calcium intake check for your child by referring to the list below. If you realize that your child isn’t eating enough calcium-rich foods to meet the minimum requirements, consult your doctor about putting him on a calcium supplement. Remember, without adequate calcium intake, your child could suffer some serious health consequences later in life. Your child’s skeletal framework is forming now. Studies indicate that females especially are at risk for developing osteoporosis and related bone fractures later in life unless they consume enough calcium. Calcium Content of Common Foods Yogurt Low-fat/skim milk Calcium fortified fruit juice Cheese pizza Cheese Collard greens Soups made with milk Macaroni and cheese Custard Cottage cheese Pudding Ice cream/frozen yogurt Shrimp Beans Broccoli
1 cup 1 cup 1 cup 1 slice 1 ounce ½ cup 1 cup ½ cup ½ cup 1 cup ½ cup ½ cup 3 ounces 1 cup ½ cup
400 300 300 200 200 170 160 150 150 145 130 125 100 90 45
mg mg mg mg mg mg mg mg mg mg mg mg mg mg mg
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A3.8 PROTEIN-MODIFIED FAST DIET The protein-modified fast diet (PMF) is a high-protein, low-carbohydrate, low-calorie diet designed to promote rapid body fat loss while maintaining lean body mass (muscle mass) when combined with the appropriate exercise prescription. A reduced carbohydrate and fat intake allows for a lower daily caloric intake of 900 to 1100 calories per day while maintaining the required protein prescription. Protein in the diet is derived from lean meat, fish, poultry, egg whites, reduced-fat cheeses, and soy protein substitutes — an average of 13 to 22 ounces per day are needed, depending on the body size. Low-carbohydrate vegetables and very limited quantities of starches, dairy, and fruit will be allowed in addition to the protein food sources. A minimal amount of fat in the diet is derived from the lean protein choices and small amounts of allowed vegetable oils. The PMF diet must be adhered to closely and only under medical supervision to allow for safe and effective weight loss. Daily vitamin and mineral supplements must be prescribed due to the restrictive nature of the diet. The PMF diet must be medically monitored and followed under physician supervision only.
DAILY VITAMIN
AND
MINERAL SUPPLEMENTS
1. A daily multivitamin containing iron and minerals. One tablet per day. Brand: ________________________________________________________________ 2. Calcium. 800 to 1000 mg per day for patients under 10 years of age. 1200 to 1500 mg per day for patients over 10 years of age. Brand: ________________________________________________________________ Amount:_______________________________________________________________ 3. Potassium supplement: Morton’s Lite Salt Under 10 years old: 1½ teaspoon per day (19 mEq) Over 10 years old: 1 teaspoon per day (36 mEq) OR A prescription for potassium as prescribed by your physician
FLUID INTAKE Maintaining an adequate fluid intake is very important. A minimum of 8 to 12 cups (64 to 96 ounces) of fluid should be consumed per day. Water is the best choice; however, the allowed (sugarfree) beverages may be also used to meet part of your daily fluid intake goal.
Protein Modified Fast Diet Food List Protein Source: Meat and Substitutes _____ ounces per day minimum Allowed
Restricted
Poultry: Chicken (without skin) Canned chicken (in broth) Turkey (without skin) Ground turkey (lean — less than 3 grams of fat per ounce)
Poultry: Chicken with skin Fried chicken
Beef: Flank, round, chuck, sirloin, tenderloin
Beef: Prime beef, beef ribs, corned beef Regular ground beef
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Veal: Roast, chop, steaks
Veal: Veal cutlets — ground and breaded
Pork: Canadian bacon Ham Roast (loin, tenderloin) Chops — fat trimmed
Pork: Pork spareribs, pork sausage Ground pork Bacon
Seafood: Fish — all Shellfish — all Tuna fish canned in water (1/4 cup = 1 ounce equivalent)
Seafood: Fried fish or shell fish Breaded fish such as fish sticks Tuna fish canned in oil
Eggs: Egg substitute (1/4 cup = 1 ounce equivalent) Egg whites (2 whites = 1 ounce equivalent)
Eggs: Egg yolks Fried eggs in butter, margarine, or oil
Allowed
Restricted
Wild Game: Venison, rabbit Lamb: Chops, leg, roast — fat trimmed Cold Cuts (reduced-fat)*: Sliced turkey, ham, roast beef Reduced-fat* luncheon meats Reduced-fat* hot dogs, sausage
Cold Cuts: Luncheon meats — regular bologna, liver, cheese, pimento loaf, salami Regular hot dogs, sausage
Cheese (reduced-fat)* Soy “vegetable” meat substitutes
Other: Peanut butter
*Read labels: should contain less than 3 grams of fat per ounce.
Protein Modified-Fast Diet Food List Vegetables: Four to Six Servings per Day 1 Serving = 1/2 Cup Cooked or 1 Cup Raw Allowed (low-starch vegetables)
Restricted
Artichokes, asparagus Bean sprouts, broccoli, Brussels sprouts Beets Cabbage, carrots, cauliflower Eggplant Greens (collard, mustard, turnip) Green beans Hearts of palm Mushrooms Okra, onions Pea pods, peppers (green, red, or yellow) Salad greens — all Sauerkraut, spinach Squash (zucchini, yellow, or spaghetti)
Beans (red, lima, kidney, white) Corn Peas (green, split, black-eyed) Potatoes Pumpkin Squash (winter or acorn) Yams Vegetable casseroles made with restricted ingredients
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Tomatoes (fresh or canned) Tomato juice Tomato paste, tomato sauce (no added sugar) Turnips Water chestnuts Vegetable juice Vegetable soup
Protein Modified-Fast Diet Food List Fruits One choice per day: 1 piece fresh fruit 2 tablespoons dried fruit ½ cup canned, no added sugar canned fruit
Fruit juice
Protein Modified-Fast Diet Food List Dairy (should contain less than 3 grams of fat per ounce; 1 ounce = 1 ounce protein equivalent) Reduced-fat cheese
Milk (whole, low-fat, or skim) Yogurt, ice cream, ice milk, frozen yogurt Regular cheese
Protein Modified-Fast Diet Food List “Free Foods” — As Desired Beverages Plain broth/bouillon (beef or chicken) Carbonated water, club soda Decaffeinated coffee, tea (unsweetened) Sugar-free drink mixes Sugar-free sodas (caffeine-free is preferred) Diet snowballs Salad Greens Lettuce, endive, romaine, spinach Celery, cucumber Onions, peppers, radishes Mushrooms Snacks and Sweet Substitutes Sugar-free gelatin Sugar-free gum Sugar-free popsicles (3 per day) Artificial sweeteners (check with your healthcare team for the preferred brand) Condiments Catsup, mustard Fat-free or very low-fat (less than 3 grams fat) mayonnaise or salad dressing Fat-free or very low-fat (less than 3 grams fat) salad dressings Fat-free “butter substitutes” — liquid and pump spray Nonstick cooking sprays
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Horseradish Taco sauce, salsa Vinegar — all flavors Lemon, lime juice Salt or salt substitute, pepper, seasonings, and spice blends Soy sauce Worcestershire sauce Hot sauce Barbecue sauce (2 tablespoons) Dill pickles Seasoning packets (e.g., taco seasoning packet, chili seasoning packet, stir-fry seasoning packet, etc.)
Protein Modified-Fast Diet Food List Breads and Starches Allowed
Restricted
After 1 to 2 weeks: Two choices per day*: One choice equals: Whole wheat bread — 1 slice Beans — 1/2 cup Dry Cereal (low sugar) — 1 cup Oatmeal, Cream of Wheat — 1/2 cup Wheat crackers — 6 Pasta (wheat is better) — 1/2 cup Popcorn — 3 cups Potato — 1 small or 1/2 cup mashed Brown rice — 1/2 cup Soup (chicken noodle) — 1/2 cup Tortilla — 1 Waffle/pancake — 1 medium
Other than the allowed amounts of: Hot cereal Regular bread-all types Biscuits, muffins, dinner rolls Rice Pasta, spaghetti, macaroni Pancakes, waffles Cold cereal Crackers, pretzels, popcorn, potato chips Stuffing (bread) Taco shells
*Check with your physician and/or dietitian prior to adding. Fats Allowed Up to 2 teaspoons per day: Oils — olive, canola, peanut, cottonseed, safflower, sunflower, sesame, sunflower Nuts — all types
Restricted Butter, lard Margarine Olives Regular mayonnaise or salad dressing Regular sour cream Regular cream cheese
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A3.9 FILLING UP WITH FIBER Verbal Cues It is important to introduce more fiber into your child’s diet. Fiber is found in whole-grain bread and grain products, beans, fruits, and vegetables. By definition, “fiber” is the part of these foods that we cannot digest or absorb. There are a host of benefits to eating it, including: •
• • •
Stabilizing blood sugar fluctuations. The carbohydrates in many high-fiber and whole-grain foods are metabolized more slowly than those in other foods. This slow metabolizing can also decrease post-meal cravings. Constipation relief. Fiber draws water into the digestive tract, resulting in softer stools that are easier to pass. Lowering the LDL cholesterol level in the blood. Consuming foods containing soluble fiber can literally help the body absorb cholesterol. Promoting a feeling of fullness. Fiber is bulky, making you feel fuller. This can help reduce overeating.
To determine how much fiber your child should eat, add five to the age of your child. So, if your child is eight years old, she should be consuming 13 grams of fiber. Most adults should consume at least 20 to 30 grams of total fiber per day. If you have not been doing this, you should work up to it gradually, as the body must become accustomed to processing larger amounts of fiber. Good sources of soluble (“cholesterol-lowering”) fiber include oatmeal, oat bran, barley, avocado, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, carrots, collard greens, sweet potatoes, beans (any kind), split peas, lentils, apricots, figs, prunes, flax seeds, and sunflower seeds. High-Fiber Food Choices Average Fiber Grams Beans Bran/oat cereals Brown rice/pasta Whole grain bread products Oatmeal Fruits and vegetables
6–8 3–11 4 2–6 4 2–3
Average serving size: 1 cup where applicable.
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A3.10 AEROBIC ACTIVITY AND FOOD CHECKLIST You will need to have 12 copies of this form on hand — one for every week. Complete one form during each week, whenever you exercise or whenever you are going to have something to eat. Week No. ____ Date:______ Day
*My goal this week is this many minutes:
This is the type of physical activity I did each day:
This is how long I did it:
My heart rate was (see program book [2]):
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat * Refer to the recommendations for your child’s color level listed in each week. Ask your child to select activities she enjoys from the list for her color level in in the program book. 1. 2. 3. 4.
Fill in your daily portion units. As you consume each unit/portion, place a check mark in the box. Try to stay within your daily allowances. Remember: your Calorie Level is :__________ (see program book) I can have ___ Carbohydrate Units each day
I can have ____ Meat/Protein Substitute Units each day
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Refer to the recommendations for your child’s color level listed [2].
I can have ___ Fat Units each day
I can have Unlimited Vegetables!
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A3.11 INITIAL GROUP CHECK-IN FORM Hello, my name is __________________________. I am ____ years old. I attend ____________________ school and am in _____ grade. Some things I do really well (or am proud of) include _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ Some things I would like to do to be healthier include _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________
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A3.12 WEEKLY GROUP CHECK-IN FORM Hello, my name is ____________________________________. This week I: (check one below) ▫ Lost _____ pounds. ▫ Gained _____ pounds. ▫ Stayed the same.
Since beginning the program I have: (check one below) ▫ Lost _____ pounds. ▫ Gained _____ pounds. ▫ Stayed the same.
My accomplishments for the week are _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ My questions or problems this week are _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________
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A3.13 COMMITMENT RATING FORM Parents and Children: Rate yourself on the scale below from 0–100. Circle the number that describes how you feel right now. How badly do you want to lead a healthier lifestyle? 0
25
50
75
100
Not At All
A Little
Somewhat
A Lot
Very Much
Do you think you will feel the same way in 6 months? YES or NO Do you think you will feel the same way a year from now? YES or NO
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A3.14 BENEFITS AND SACRIFICES FORM Make a list of the benefits and sacrifices of leading a healthier lifestyle. Sacrifices
Benefits
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A3.15 THE ABCs OF THE BEHAVIOR CHAIN — VIGNETTE Shelly is trying to lose weight by making healthier food choices and by becoming more active. On her way to recess to play softball, she meets up with three friends. She follows her friends to the snack shack, where they all sit at a picnic table gossiping and munching on chips, candy bars, and sodas. Shelly realizes as she finishes a can of soda and a chocolate bar that she slipped off her diet, and begins feeling down, while her friends gossip on. Antecedent: What happened first? _________________________________________________________________________ Behavior: Did the kids make a healthy, unhealthy, or questionable food choice? _________________________________________________________________________ Consequence: How did the kids feel? _________________________________________________________________________ Think of a time when you had a tough decision to make about what to eat, and write it down: Antecedent: What happened first? _________________________________________________________________________ Behavior: Did you make a healthy, unhealthy, or questionable food choice? _________________________________________________________________________ Consequences: How did you feel afterwards? _________________________________________________________________________
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A3.16 SHORT-TERM AND LONG-TERM GOALS FORM SHORT-TERM GOALS My Short-Term Goals are: _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ Examples: Drop one size, lose 10 pounds, walk ½ mile without resting, try 3 to 5 new fruits and vegetables, set and try to meet weekly goals
LONG-TERM GOALS My Long-Term Goals are: _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ Examples: Reduce my waistline by 5 inches, walk a 10K race, eat 3-5 fruits and vegetables a day, set and try to meet weekly goals
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A3.17 WEEKLY GOAL SETTING AND ACTION PLANNING FORM My GOAL this week is to _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ 1. Does it say what you WILL do (NOT what you WON’T do this week)? 2. Do you have control over it? 3. Is it easy to do? Steps and reminders (include who, when, where, or how) _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ My reward for accomplishing my goal is _______________________________________________________________________________
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A3.18 COGNITIVE RESTRUCTURING TECHNIQUES FORM 1. Avoid allowing participants to set unreasonable, nonspecific, or unattainable goals. 2. Encourage participants to think about, embellish, and discuss their progress, not shortcomings. 3. Enforce that participants avoid imperatives such as “always” and “never.” Also, disallow the use of adjectives such as “good” or “bad” when referring to food or activity—instead, encourage participants to use the adjectives “healthy” or “unhealthy.” 4. Instruct participants to counter negative thoughts with rational, positive restatements. 5. Encourage participants to set easy, realistic, specific, and attainable weight loss goals that focus on healthier eating and activity.
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A3.19 GOAL ASSESSMENT FORM List the GOALS you have set to become more active and eat more healthfully below. _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ List the GOALS you have accomplished below. Place a (+) next to those you have been able to keep doing every week. _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ List the GOALS you have been unable to accomplish below. _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ List the GOALS you still want to achieve or that you may want to set in the future. _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________
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A3.20 BEHAVIOR SUBSTITUTION OR RESTRUCTURING FORM This week I will (to be more active) _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ Instead of _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ This week I will try (to eat more healthfully) _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ Instead of _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________
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A3.21 RELAPSE ROAD MAP
YOU WANT TO BE HERE — ON THE ROAD TO HEALTHY HWY
Holiday Havoc Highway
Boredom Boulevard
Sugar Street
Fast Food Freeway
Depression Drive
Stress Street
YOU ARE HERE
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A3.22 RULES FOR EATING FORM 1. Ask participants to chew more (15 to 30 per bite) and try to eat more slowly. Encourage family members to engage in conversation and discussions during meals to decrease their speed of eating. 2. Encourage participants to take smaller bites. 3. Discourage participants from “taking seconds” (except for vegetables)! 4. Encourage participants to leave some of every type of food on their plate (explain why this is OK). 5. Ask participants to take smaller portions and leave the serving bowls of food in the kitchen. 6. Encourage participants to use a smaller plate. 7. Suggest that participants put their forks down between every bite. 8. Enforce that participants eat ONLY at the table, NOT in front of the television, at the kitchen counter, or while engaged in other activities. 9. Encourage participants to eat three bites of every food. Participants should “grade” the new foods that are served and decide whether they are acceptable to continue serving on a regular basis. 10. Have participants drink a large glass of water or sugar-free beverage 15 minutes before every meal. 11. Encourage participants to eat with their other (nondominant) hand. 12. Ask participants to eat their meals with chopsticks for an entire day or week!
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A3.23 BEHAVIORS FOR CONTROLLING EATING HABITS FORM Here are four useful behaviors: 1. Follow an eating schedule and don’t eat at other times. Plan your schedule for eating: Breakfast Morning snack Lunch Afternoon snack Dinner
time _____ time _____ time _____ time _____ time ______
2. Eat in one place, for example, at home, in the kitchen at the table, for all meals and snacks. 3. Don’t do anything else while eating. Don’t eat while you are studying, watching TV, reading, or doing other activities. 4. Make your list of alternative activities. These should be practical as well as enjoyable. What I Can Do Instead of Eating (Alternative Activities): ________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ (Make sure you include some activities that you can do inside and some that you can do outside. Keep this list handy so that you can consult it when you feel tempted to eat between your scheduled meals.)
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A3.24 SOCIETAL TRIGGERS FORM Name the people, places, times, or events that tempt you to overeat or to be less active. _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ What can you do to change or avoid these temptations? _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ List the people and places where it is easiest for you to stay on your program. _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ List the times and events when it is easiest for you to stay on your program. _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ List the people and places where it is hardest for you to stay on your program. _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ List the times and events when it is hardest for you to stay on your program. _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ Next, what can you do to change or to avoid these situations (people, places, times, or events)? _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________
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A3.25 TEMPTATIONS AND POSITIVE SELF-STATEMENTS FORM To begin, identify the situations that tempt you to eat and what you usually say to yourself when you feel unable to resist. Have your parents help you identify these associated negative thoughts. Tempting Situations: _________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________ Associated Negative Thoughts: _________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________ After identifying these tempting situations, practice responding to them with positive selfstatements that allow you to react in a positive way. Your parents will help you. Tempting Situations: _________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________ Positive Self-Statements: _________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________
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A3.26 ADDITIONAL ROLE PLAYS, VIGNETTES OR SCENARIOS TO CONSIDER USING WHEN WORKING
WITH
OVERWEIGHT CHILDREN
AND
FAMILIES
Teasing and Bullying Not Wanting to Be Different The Usual Suspects of Overeating and under Activity Peer Pressure to Overeat or Be under Active Temptation (Home, School, Peer, Societal) Sabotage (Home, School, Peer, Societal) Expect the Unexpected
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A3.27 WEIGHT-O-RAMA Game rules: All players place one forearm flush on the table. If you are ready to answer, raise your hand and keep your elbow on the table. The first player to raise a hand gets a chance to answer a question. If that player gives an incorrect answer, the other players can try to answer the same question. Players get 1 point for each correct answer. The player with the last correct answer picks the next category. The youngest player starts each game. The first player to score 5 points chooses one of the incentives available. Play continues as long as there is time. The five categories are: Food Labels, Holidays, About Foods, Funnies, About Me
FOOD LABELS 1. True or False: Foods or ingredients are listed from the least amount (first) to the most amount (last) on a food label. 2. How many grams of fat per 1 ounce make a meat low fat? 3. Name a food that has no label. 4. Name a brand of hot dog that is low in fat. 5. Does “no cholesterol” or “cholesterol free” mean a product is low in calories? 6. Name a brand of cold cut that is low in fat. 7. Name a product that contains lard. 8. Which type of fat is bad for your heart? 9. A particular candy bar you like has 15 calories per 1 ounce. If your candy bar weighs 6 ounces, how many calories does it contain? 10. Name a brand of cheese that is low in fat.
HOLIDAYS 1. How can you make brownies so that they are low in fat and calories? 2. What can you do to reduce the caloric content of a school holiday party full of highcalorie snacks? 3. When dashing through the snow, how many horses are pulling the “open sleigh”? 4. How could you enjoy watching the Super Bowl and also be more active? 5. What are Santa’s helpers called? 6. What is Frosty’s nose made of? 7. Give an example of one small change you could make while out of school over the holidays, which could become a habit when you start back to school next year. 8. Name a holiday tradition that will also increase your activity level? 9. What day is Independence Day? 10. What is your favorite activity?
ABOUT FOODS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
High-fat meats provide how many calories per 1-ounce serving? What would ensure that your fast-food chicken sandwich was low in calories? How many calories in a typical slice of pepperoni pizza? The Sta-Puff Marshmallow Man belongs in which food group? How many peanuts make up one serving? BONUS: This represents how many calories? One serving (1 cup raw, 1/2 cup cooked) of vegetables contains how many calories? One slice of bread (2 slices of diet bread) contains how many calories? Which ingredient in tuna salad is most likely to increase its caloric value? Cranberries belong to which food group? Name three high-calorie and three low-calorie toppings for a salad or baked potato.
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FUNNIES 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Which burns more calories: sleeping or skiing? Tell a funny Knock-Knock joke. What is your doctor’s last name? BONUS: What is the clinic phone number? The Pillsbury Dough Boy belongs to which food group? What is the funniest movie you’ve ever seen? What was Bill Cosby’s profession on The Bill Cosby Show? What is Charlie Brown’s dog’s name? What is your favorite comic strip or comic strip character? Name the rock star that has the same name as a ground meat dish. Name the four Beatles.
ABOUT ME 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Name a brand of low-fat cheese that you have tried and liked. Would you rather walk, roller skate, or ride a bike? Name one thing you have changed since coming to this program. If you could have any three things you wanted for your holiday presents, what would they be? Name three low-calorie snack foods you’ve tried. Did you like them? What is the best thing about coming to this program? What is the worst thing about coming to this program? If you could make your favorite high-calorie food low in calories, which food would you pick? What high-calorie food is hardest for you to resist? Name a sport you’ve tried? Do you like it?
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APPENDIX REFERENCES 1. Ogden, C. L., K. M. Flegal, M. D. Carroll, and C. L. Johnson. Prevalence and trends in overweight among US children and adolescents, 1999–2000. JAMA. 288:1728–1732, 2002. 2. Sothern, M., Von Almen, TK. & Schumacher, H. Trim Kids: The Proven Plan that has Helped Thousands of Children Achieve a Healthier Weight. New York, NY: Harper Collins Publishers, 2001. 3. CDC. Available at: http://www.cdc.gov/growthcharts/ (accessed April 2005) Accessed. 4. Lohman, T., Roche, AA, Martorell, R., Eds. Anthropometric standardization reference manual. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics., 1988 5. Roche, A., Heymsfield, SB, Lohman, TG., Eds. Human Body Composition. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics., 1996 6. Durnin, J. V. and J. Womersley. Body fat assessed from total body density and its estimation from skinfold thickness: measurements on 481 men and women aged from 16 to 72 years. Br J Nutr. 32:77–97, 1974. 7. Jackson, A. S. and M. L. Pollock. Generalized equations for predicting body density of men. Br J Nutr. 40:497–504, 1978. 8. Lohman, T. G. Skinfolds and body density and their relation to body fatness: a review. Hum Biol. 53:181–225, 1981. 9. Sloan, A. W. Estimation of body fat in young men. J Appl Physiol. 23:311–315, 1967. 10. Goran MI, D. P., Johnson R, Nagy TR, Hunter G. Cross-calibration of body-composition techniques against dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry in young children. Am J Clin Nutr. 63:299–305, 1996. 11. Cameron, N., Griffitns, PL, Wright, MM, Blencowe, C, Davis, NC, Pettifor, JM Norris, SA. Regression equations to estimate percentage body fat in African prepubertal children aged 9 y. Am J Clin Nutr. 80:70–75, 2004. 12. Bray, G., DeLaney, JP, Volaufova, DW, Harsha, DW, Champaign C. Prediction of body fat in 12-yold Arican American and white children: evaluation of methods. Am J Clin Nutr. 76:980–990, 2002. 13. Gutin, B., M. Litaker, S. Islam, T. Manos, C. Smith, and F. Treiber. Body-composition measurement in 9-11-y-old children by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, skinfold-thickness measurements, and bioimpedance analysis. Am J Clin Nutr. 63:287–292, 1996. 14. Slaughter, M. H., T. G. Lohman, R. A. Boileau, C. A. Horswill, R. J. Stillman, M. D. Van Loan, and D. A. Bemben. Skinfold equations for estimation of body fatness in children and youth. Hum Biol. 60:709–723, 1988. 15. Friedl, K. E., J. P. DeLuca, L. J. Marchitelli, and J. A. Vogel. Reliability of body-fat estimations from a four-compartment model by using density, body water, and bone mineral measurements. Am J Clin Nutr. 55:764–770, 1992. 16. Mazess, R. B., H. S. Barden, J. P. Bisek, and J. Hanson. Dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry for totalbody and regional bone-mineral and soft-tissue composition. Am J Clin Nutr. 51:1106–1112, 1990. 17. Ellis KJ, S. R., Pratt JA, Pond WG. Accuracy of dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry for body-composition measurements in children. Am J Clin Nutr. 60:660–665, 1994. 18. Godin, G. and R. J. Shephard. Gender differences in perceived physical self-efficacy among older individuals. Percept Mot Skills. 60:599–602, 1985. 19. Sallis, J. F. Epidemiology of physical activity and fitness in children and adolescents. Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr. 33:403–408, 1993. 20. Sallis, J. F., C. C. Berry, S. L. Broyles, T. L. McKenzie, and P. R. Nader. Variability and tracking of physical activity over 2 yr in young children. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 27:1042–1049, 1995. 21. Crespo, C. J., E. Smit, R. P. Troiano, S. J. Bartlett, C. A. Macera, and R. E. Andersen. Television watching, energy intake, and obesity in US children: results from the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 1988–1994. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 155:360–365, 2001. 22. Parcel, G. S., E. Edmundson, C. L. Perry, H. A. Feldman, N. O’Hara-Tompkins, P. R. Nader, C. C. Johnson, and E. J. Stone. Measurement of self-efficacy for diet-related behaviors among elementary school children. J Sch Health. 65:23–27, 1995. 23. Edmundson, E., G. S. Parcel, C. L. Perry, H. A. Feldman, M. Smyth, C. C. Johnson, A. Layman, K. Bachman, T. Perkins, K. Smith, and E. Stone. The effects of the child and adolescent trial for cardiovascular health intervention on psychosocial determinants of cardiovascular disease risk behavior among third-grade students. Am J Health Promot. 10:217–225, 1996.
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24. Edmundson, E., G. S. Parcel, H. A. Feldman, J. Elder, C. L. Perry, C. C. Johnson, B. J. Williston, E. J. Stone, M. Yang, L. Lytle, and L. Webber. The effects of the Child and Adolescent Trial for Cardiovascular Health upon psychosocial determinants of diet and physical activity behavior. Prev Med. 25:442–454, 1996. 25. McMurray R., W. Guion, B. Ainsworth, and J. Harrell. Predicting aerobic power in children: a comparison of two methods. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 38:227–233, 1998. 26. Loftin, M., M. Sothern, L. Trosclair, A. O’Hanlon, J. Miller, and J. Udall. Scaling VO2 peak in obese and non-obese girls. Obes Res., 9:290–296, 2001. 27. American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM)’s Guidelines for Testing and Prescription, 6th ed. Baltimore, MD: Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins, 2000. 28. Achenbach, T. M. Manual for the Child Behavior Checklist/ 4-18 and 1991 Profile. Burlington, VT, 1991. 29. Achenbach, T. M. Integrative Guide to the 1991 CBCL/ 4-18, YSR and TRF Profiles. Burlington, VT, 1991. 30. Kovacs, M. Children’s Depression Inventory. San Antonio, TX: Multi-Health Systems, 1981. 31. Olson, D. H., Porner, J., Lavee, Y. Family Adaptability and Cohesion Evaluation Scales (FACES III). In: F. S. Science. Ed. Handbook of Measurements for Marriage and Family Therapy. New York: Brunner Mazel, 1985, pp. 180–185. 32. Piers, E., Harris, D. The Piers-Harris Children’s Self-Concept Scale. Los Angeles, CA: Western Psychological Services, 1969. 33. Piers, E. V. Piers-Harris Children’s Self-Concept Scale: Revised Manual. Los Angeles, CA: Western Psychological Services, 1984. 34. Piers, E., Harris, D., Herzberg, D. The Piers-Harris Children’s Self Concept Scale. 2nd ed. Los Angeles: Western Psychological Services, 2002. 35. Falkner F, Tanner J. Human Growth. London, UK: Baillier Tindall, 1979. 36. Strong, W. Physical fitness of children: mens sana in corpore sano. Am J Dis Child. 141:488–496, 1987.
Index A Abdominal adiposity, exercise and, 196 Absentees, 240 Academic performance, 60, 173 Acanthosis nigricans, 84, 101 Achenbach Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL), 106 Adolescent bariatric surgery, See Bariatric surgery Aerobic exercise activity and food checklist, 371 field sports, 239, 259–260, 337, 345 interdisciplinary, interactive approach, 256, 261, 346 Aerobic performance, 68–69, 113–114, See also Cardiopulmonary fitness ventilatory anaerobic threshold, 115 Aerobic volleyball, 239 “A” factors, 237, 245 Age-specific BMI criteria, 46 Alanine aminotransferase (ALT), 36 American Heart Association guidelines, 127 Amphetamines, 211 Anorexia nervosa, 56, See also Eating disorders Anthropometrics, 45, 100–101 Antidepressants, 56 Anxiety, 56, 107 Arthritis, 10, 89 Aspartate aminotransferase (AST), 36 Asthma, 37 “At risk of overweight,” 46 dietary prevention and treatment recommendations, 125 Attention deficit disorder, 37 Audience segmentation, 15 Autonomic function, 114–115 Awards, 23
B Bardet–Biedl syndrome, 32, 86 Bariatric surgery, 4, 81, 223–231 behavior modification component, 4 cautions, 230 contraindications, 225 efficacy, 230 indications and referral guidelines, 223–225 nutritional considerations, 226–230 postoperative management, 228–230 preoperative team assessment, 226–228 Beckwith–Wiedeman syndrome, 32 Behavioral assessment tools, 106 Behavioral counseling, 62, See also Behavioral therapy Behavioral theories and models, 175–177, 244–246
Behavioral therapy, 3, 61, 82, 147–167, 2443–246, See also Eating behaviors, behavioral modification techniques; Pediatric weight management programs; specific approaches, programs adolescent studies, 164–165 bariatric surgery and, 4 behavior chain ABCs, 376 cognitive restructuring form, 379 component analysis, 165 contingency management, 149 contingent reinforcement, 150 counseling, 62 dietary approaches and, 122 eating and activity patterns, 148–149 efficacy, 42, 148 family-based counseling interventions, 150 family-based studies overview, 149–165 family-centered approach, 3 family-therapist relationship, 243 goal setting and action planning, 148, 239, 249, 377–378 individual treatment approaches, 166–167 interdisciplinary interactive approach, 235–240, 243–265, See also Interdisciplinary, interactive pediatric weight-management program knowledge and, 61–62 motivational interviewing, 63 multicomponent approach, 148 parent-focused treatment, 165–166 program objectives, 13 psychosocial factors, 55 relapse prevention, 148, 250, 382 role plays, vignettes or scenarios, 387 self-efficacy and, 62–63 self-monitoring, 148–149 social reinforcement and modeling, 149 societal triggers form, 385 stimulus control and cue elimination, 149, 248–249 temptations and positive self-statements, 386 transtheoretical approach, 244 treatment techniques and strategies, 148–149 Behavior change, environmental barriers to, 62 Behavior-modification skills instruction, 236, 238 Behaviors for controlling eating form, 384 Behavior specialist, 17–18 Behavior substitution or restructuring form, 381 Benefits and sacrifices form, 375 Beverages, 3, 99 sugar-free, 357 Biliopancreatic bypass, 228 Binge eating, 56, 57, 58, 89, 98 Bioelectrical impedance, 47, 318 Blood pressure, 88
393
394 exercise testing, 114–115 hypertension, See Hypertension measuring, 34, 46, 85, 315 Blount disease, 12, 37, 810 BMI, See Body mass index Body composition assessing, 47, 85–86, 100–102, 317–318, See also Body mass index; Clinical evaluation exercise and, 195–196 Body image dissatisfaction, 59 Body mass index (BMI), 43, 46, 85 age- and gender-specific criteria, 46 calculating, 101–102, 312 determining goal weight, 44 follow-up evaluation, 90–91 growth chart, 43, 46, 85, 101 Internet resource, 292 obesity risk calculation, 85 pediatric distribution trends, 2 Body weight goal, 44 Bone disorders, 140 Bone-mineral content (BMC), 47 Breads, 356 Breast-feeding, 80 Brief counseling, 62 Budgeting pediatric weight management, 20 Bulimia, 56–57, 98 Bullying, 59
C Calcium, 140–141, 365 Cancer, 10 Carbohydrate classification, 126–127 Carbohydrate-containing food groups, 356 Cardiac structure and function, 34 Cardiopulmonary fitness, 68–69 interdisciplinary, interactive approach, 256, 261, 346 testing, 47–48, 68, 113–114, 237 “true” cardiovascular fitness, 114 ventilatory anaerobic threshold, 115 Cardiovascular diseases, 33–35, 81, 88, See also Hypertension; Lipid disorders metabolic syndrome, 35 obesity-associated health costs, 10 Case management, 102 Centers for Disease Control (CDC), 46 Chest pain, 88 Child abuse, 58–59, 898 Child–parent conflicts, 57 Children’s Depression Inventory, 107 Children’s Dietary Social Support Scale, 319 Cholelithiasis, 36 Cholesterol levels, 33–34 Circumference measurements, 314–315 Clearance form, 283 Clinical coordinator job description, 273–274 Clinical evaluation, 43, 304–305 bariatric surgery candidates, 226–228 baseline evaluation for multidisciplinary program, 22
Handbook of Pediatric Obesity: Clinical Management behavioral assessments, 106 blood pressure, 315 BMI, See Body mass index body composition analysis, 47–49, 85–86, 100–102, 317–318 checklist, 300–301 circumference measurement, 46, 314–315 exercise testing, 113–116 family history, 83 follow-up, 44–45, 90–91 forms, 302–303, 306–307 full evaluation for overweight, 313 heart rate, 315 height and weight measurement, 45–46, 100–102, 311 interdisciplinary interactive approach, 237 laboratory blood work, 44, 46, 86, 316 medical history, 82–83 nutritional assessment, 89, 96–102, See also Nutritional assessment physical activity and fitness assessment, 47–48, 319–320 physical exam, 84–85 primary risk factors, 84 program forms, See Pediatric weight management programs, clinical management forms psychological testing, 321 psychosocial assessments, 107, See also Psychological evaluation; Psychosocial factors review of systems, 84 sexual maturity rating, 322 social history, 83 testing/measurement protocols, 311–322 test preparation letter, 299 Clinical management forms, See Pediatric weight management programs, clinical management forms Clinical pediatric weight management programs, See Pediatric weight management programs Clinic coordinator, 17–18 Cognitive abilities of children, 244 Cognitive barriers to behavior change, 61 Cognitive behavioral therapy, 61, See also Behavioral therapy; Nutrition education Cognitive restructuring form, 379 Commitment, assessing, 245, 374 Committed to Kids, 135, 137, 244–246, 325–326, See also Interdisciplinary, interactive pediatric weightmanagement program applied activities and experiences, 250 goal assessment, 249 Community environment assessment, 97 Comorbidities, See Obesity-associated comorbidities Computer tools and resources Internet-based treatment, 201–207 nutrition education, 133–134 Condiments, 357–358 Congenital leptin deficiency, 212 Congestive heart failure, 34 Contingency management, 149 Contingent reinforcement, 150 Contracting, 62, 179
Index Cooling down, 336–337 Corticosteroid therapy, 34 Cortisol, 32, 88 Counseling, 62, See also Behavioral therapy; Pediatric weight management programs nutrition education, 133–134 physician’s role, 42–43 Critical periods of obesity development, 80, 121 Cue elimination, 149, 248 Cultural influences, ideal body image, 59 Cushing disease, 32, 88 Cycle ergometry, 68, 116
D Daily nutrition plan, 348 Depression, 56, 81, 89, 148 assessment tools, 106–107 DEXA, 47, 318 Diabetes mellitus, 10 Diabetes type 2, 10, 12, 36, 81, 83, 86, 88 metformin therapy, 212 Diagnosing pediatric overweight and obesity, 44, 82–85 BMI and, 85, See also Body mass index Diagnostic Survey for Eating Disorders (DSED), 109 Diet and nutrition, See also Nutrition education children’s understanding of, 244 convenience versus, 2 five a day recommendations, 2 food availability, 97 food preferences, 42 healthy diet costs, 10 intervention approaches, See Dietary approaches parental influence, 42 pregnancy and, 80, 83 program objectives, 14 referral to dietician, 89 Dietary approaches, 81–82, 121–129, 388–389, See also Eating behaviors, behavioral modification techniques aerobic activity and food checklist, 371 “all-or-none,” 246 alternative approaches, 136–138 “anytime” foods and beverages, 357–358 applied activities and experiences, 250 bariatric surgery and, 228–230 behavioral counseling and, 121 critical intervention opportunities, 122 daily nutrition plan, 348 education, See Nutrition education evaluation of reduced-calorie diets, 136–138 evidence-based review, 122–124 food guide pyramid, 123 handling nonadherence, 247 hypocaloric diets, See Very-low calorie diets individual- and family-based interventions, 122–124 low-glycemic diets, 44, 126–127, 136–137, 163 meal plans, 359–360 portion control, See Portion control prevention and treatment recommendations
395 overweight children and adolescents, 125–126 at risk for overweight children and adolescents, 125–126 severely overweight children and adolescents, 126 young children with parental obesity, 124–125 protein modified fast, 128, 137, 161, 235, 366–369 protein-sparing modified fast, 137, 161, 162 role modeling, 250–251 rules for eating form, 383 setting limits, 246–247 social support assessment, 319 Traffic Light Diet, 133, 134, 150–154, 157–159, 161, 331 types, 122 very-low calorie diets and, 44, 122, 123, 127–128, 137, 163, 235 Diet prescription, 44 Dietary fat, 356–357 Dietary intake assessment, 98–100 Dietary Intervention Study in Children (DISC), 134 Dietary interview, 98, 99 Dietician, 17, 43, 89 bariatric surgery candidates and, 228 Dieting social support assessment, 319 Discrepancy development, 63 Discrete Choice Experiment, 12 Drug therapy, See Pharmacotherapy Dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DEXA), 47, 318 Dumping syndrome, 229
E Eating Attitudes Test (EAT-26), 108–109 Eating behaviors, behavioral modification techniques, 148, 256, See also Behavioral therapy; Dietary approaches; Nutrition education behaviors for controlling eating habits form, 384 rules for eating form, 383 societal triggers form, 385 temptations and positive self-statements, 386 Weight-o-Rama game, 388–389 Eating Disorder Inventory, 108 Eating disorders, 56–57, 98 child abuse and, 58–59 family history, 83 measures, 108–109 Prader–Willi syndrome, 32 Economic burden of pediatric obesity, 10 Education, nutritional, See Nutrition education Educational models, 11 Educational resources and materials, 18–19 Emotional abuse, 58–59 Empathy, 63 Employer program, 330 Endocrine disorders, 32, 81, 84, 88, See also specific types Endurance performance assessment, 113–114 Energy cost of locomotion, 69 Energy expenditure, 69, 86, 115 Environmental barriers, 62, 174 Ephedrine, 211 Ethnicity, See Race and ethnicity
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Evaluating health promotion programs, 24 Evaluation, See Clinical evaluation Exercise, 88, See also Physical activity advantages and disadvantages for obese child, 68 body composition and, 196 economy of locomotion, 69, 115–116 energy expenditure, 69 flexibility, 254–255, 258, 260–261, 345–346 flow state, 175 motivational techniques, 177–185, See also Physical activity, motivational techniques muscular strength and endurance, 69–70, 181, 256, 260–261, 338–344 physiologic feedback, 179 postural training, 179–180 rating of perceived exertion, 71 strength training, See Strength training suitable activities, 71–72 testing protocols, 319–320 treatment approaches, 81–82 vicious cycle of obesity, 173 warming up, 257–259, 332 Exercise interventions, interactive, interdisciplinary program, 252–262 aerobic activity and food checklist, 371 aerobic exercise and cardiopulmonary endurance, 261–262, 346 aerobic field sports, 259–260, 337, 345 cardiorespiratory endurance, 256 cooling down, 336–337 designing a routine, 332–333 Fit Kit Walking Program, 262, 346–347 flexibility, 255, 2576, 261, 345–346 four-level progression, 252–253 homework rule, 337–338 indoor play areas, 343–344 intensity and pacing skills, 259, 335–336 MPEP, See Moderate Intensity Progressive Exercise Program muscular strength and endurance, 256, 260–261, 338–344, 347, See also Strength training organizational resources and programs, 327–329 outdoor play, 262, 345 sample curriculum, 257–262, 332–347 Exercise interventions, metabolic health and, 189–197, 251 abdominal adiposity, 196 components of successful programs duration, 197 frequency, 197 intensity, 196 mode, 196 program length, 197 glucose metabolism, 194–195 hypertension, 195–196 insulin, 194–195 lipid status, 192–194 HDL cholesterol, 193–194 triglycerides, 192–193 overview of studies, 189–192 Exercise-promoting interventions, See Physical activity, motivational techniques
Exercise safety, 340 Exercise specialist, 17–18 Exercise testing, 113–116 autonomic function, 114–115 blood pressure, 115 cycle ergometry, 68, 116 locomotion economy, 115–116 peak test protocols, 115–116 physiological considerations, 113 treadmill, 115–116 ventilatory anaerobic threshold, 115
F Familial combined hyperlipidemia, 33 Familial factors in pediatric obesity development, 148 Familial hypercholesterolemia, 33 Family Adaptability and Cohesion Evaluation Scales III (FACES III), 109 Family and child physical activity, 174 Family and nutrition issues, 96–97 Family-based treatment approach, 3, 41–42, 122–124, 236, See also Behavioral therapy; Pediatric weight management programs adolescent studies, 164–165 behavioral counseling in clinical settings, 147–167, See also Behavioral therapy group treatment, 150 implementing, See Pediatric weight management programs, implementing interdisciplinary interactive approach, See Interdisciplinary, interactive pediatric weightmanagement program literature review, 150 parent-focused treatment, 166 sample nutrition education curriculum, 138–141 Family dysfunction, 57 custody issues, 96 social service referral, 89 Family Environment Scale (FES), 109 Family history, 80, 83 Family psychosocial issues, 57–59, 98 assessment tools, 108–109 home environment and child obesity risk, 79 Family-therapist relationship, 244 Fast food consumption, 58, 96, 100 Fat intake, 126 dietary sources, 356–357 low-fat dietary guidelines, 127 low glycemic diets vs., 136–137 Fatty liver disease, 36 Fenfluramine, 212 Fiber, 265, 370 Financial resources, 19–20 Fit Kit Walking Program, 262, 346–347 Fitness assessment, 47–48, 68, 237 evaluation form, 304–305 exercise testing, 113–116 “Five a day” recommendations, 2 Flat feet, 89
Index
397
Flexibility exercises, 255, 257, 261, 345–346 Flow state, 174 Follow-up, 23, 44, 90–91 Food frequency questionnaires, 99 Food groups, 354–358 Food guide pyramid, 123 Food labels, 388 Food portion and unit lists, 349–353 Food preferences, 42 Food record practice, 364 Football, aerobic, 337 Forms and questionnaires, See Pediatric weight management programs, clinical management forms FRAMES, 244 Fruits and vegetables, 2, 263, 355, 356 Fundamental motor skills, 70–71
G Gait patterns of obese children, 69 Gallstones, 36 Gastric bypass surgery, See Bariatric surgery Gastrointestinal disorders, 36, 83 Gender, eating disorders and, 56–57 Gender-specific BMI criteria, 46 Genetics, 2, 4 Genetic syndromes, 32, 82, 86 Genu varum, 81, 89 Ghrelin, 32 Glucose levels exercise and, 194 metabolic syndrome, 35 Glucose tolerance, 88 Glycemic index, 126 Glycemic load, 126 Goal assessment, 249, 380 Goal setting, 148, 239, 248–249 forms, 377–378 Goal weight, 44 Gout, 109 Group-based interventions family-based counseling interventions, 150 implementing, See Pediatric weight management programs, implementing interdisciplinary interactive approach, 235–240, 243–265, See also Interdisciplinary, interactive pediatric weight-management program nutrition education, 133–134 physical activity motivation, 178 Growth and development, assessing, 100 Growth hormone deficiency, 32
H Health Health Health Health
Belief Model, 176 education models, 11 Information Program for Teens (HIPTeens), 202 problems, See Obesity-associated comorbidities
Health promotion interventions, See also Pediatric weight management programs designing, 14–16 education, See Nutrition education evaluating, 24 implementing, 16–24, See also Pediatric weight management programs, implementing knowledge and public understanding and support, 11 models, 11 models, applying to practice, 14–15 organizational resources and programs, 327–329 physical activity motivation, See Physical activity, motivational techniques Health-related quality of life (HRQL), 61 Healthy Habits, 133 Heart disease, 10, 34 Heart rate, 68, 114, 261–262 measuring, 315, 346 Height measurement, 45–46, 100–102, 311 Helplessness deficiencies, 175 Hepatic disorders, 36 Hepatitis, 33 High-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, 35 exercise and, 193–194 Holidays, 388 Homework later rule, 337–338 Hydrostatic weighing, 47 Hypercholesterolemia, 32 Hypercortisolism, 32 Hyperlipidemia, See Lipid disorders Hypertension, 10, 33–35, 80, 81, 82, 88, See also Blood pressure defining, 46 exercise and, 195–196 pediatric baseline, 34 Hypocaloric diet, See Very-low calorie diets Hypoparathyroidism, 32 Hypothyroidism, 32, 84, 86, 88
I Incentives and rewards, 206 Indoor play areas, 343–344 Infancy, critical period for obesity development, 80–81 Insulin levels, exercise and, 195 Insulin resistance, 10, 32, 34–36, 81, 82, 88 indicators, 84, 101 Interdisciplinary, interactive pediatric weight-management program, See also Pediatric weight management programs absentee management, 240 “A” factors, 237, 245 Committed to Kids, 135, 137, 244–245 exercise instruction, 252–262, See also Exercise interventions, interactive, interdisciplinary program family exercise and fitness sessions, 251 family intervention, 236 four-level progression, 236, 252–253 goal assessment, 249, 380
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goal setting, 248 group exercise, 239–240 group nutrition, 2409 implementing, See also Pediatric weight management programs, implementing nutrition education sessions, 262–265, See also Nutrition education orientation meeting, 237 progress monitoring, 238–239 relapse prevention, 250 resources for materials, 325–326 sample curriculum, 257–262 self-monitoring, 149, 248 setting limits, 246–248 Internet-based treatment, 201–207 computer training and counseling, 204 feasibility, 206–207 future directions, 207 HIPTeens, 202–205 incentives, 206 measuring participation, 203 pros and cons, 206 weight measurement, 204
J Juices, 3
K Kids’ Eating Disorder Survey, 108 Knowledge and behavior change, 61
L Laboratory blood work, 44, 46, 86, 316 test preparation letter, 299 Learned helplessness, 175 Legal issues, 16 Legg–Calve–Perthe disease, 89 Leptin, 32, 212 Liability issues, 16 Lifestyle, incorporating behavior change into, 245 Limit setting, 246–248 Lipid disorders, 33–34, 80, 88 exercise and, 192–194 Lipid profiles, very-low calorie diets and, 127–128 Liver disorders, 36 Locomotion, energy cost of, 69, 115–116 Loftin–Sothern treadmill protocol, 319–320 Low-calorie and very-low calorie diets, 44, 122, 123, 127–128 evaluation of, 135–137 Low-calorie pizza, 364 Low-carbohydrate diets, 44 Low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, 128 Low-density lipoprotein (LDL) receptors, 33 Low-fat dietary guidelines, 127 Low-fat diets, low-glycemic diets vs., 136–137 Low-glycemic diets, 44, 126–127, 136–137, 163
M Marketing health promotion programs, 15–16 MATCH model, 11 Maximal oxygen uptake (VO2 max), 48, 68–69, 113–114, 237 peak exercise test protocols, 116 Measurements, See Clinical evaluation; specific measurements Meat food group, 354 Medical complications and comorbidities, See Obesityassociated comorbidities Medical history, 82–83, 279–282 Medical supervision, 44 Medications, See Pharmacotherapy Menarche, age at, 2 Menstruation, 2, 56, 81, 101 Mental health, 48, 56–57, 81, 89, 98, See also Psychosocial factors Metabolic health, exercise interventions and, 189–197, 251–252, See also Exercise interventions, metabolic health and Metabolic syndrome, 35, 88, 189 Metabolic testing, 47–48 Metformin, 212, 215–216 Milk and dairy products, 356 Moderate Intensity Progressive Exercise Program (MPEP), 253, 259, 332–335 after-school plan, 337–338 motivational techniques for increasing physical activity, 177–184, See also Physical activity, motivational techniques Mortality risk for obese adults, 223 Motivation issues, 62 Motivational interviewing, 63, 244 Motivational theories and models, 175–177, See also Physical activity, motivational techniques Health Belief Model, 176 social cognitive theory, 176–177 theory of planned behavior, 176 Motor performance, 70–71 MPEP, See Moderate Intensity Progressive Exercise Program Multidisciplinary bariatric team, 225–228 Multidisciplinary family-based treatment approach, 42–43, See also Interdisciplinary, interactive pediatric weight-management program exercise interventions, See Exercise interventions, interactive, interdisciplinary program implementing, See Pediatric weight management programs, implementing medical supervision, 44 motivational techniques for increasing physical activity, 177–178 nutrition education, 134–136, See also Nutrition education physician’s role, 43 sample nutrition education curriculum, 138–141 Multilevel Approach to Community Health (MATCH), 11
Index Muscular strength and endurance, 69–70, 100–102, 179–181, 256, 260–261, 332–333, 338–344, See also Nutrition education; Strength training “Pull Your Own Weight” exercises, 347 Music, 178
N National Cholesterol Education Program, 134 Native Americans, 3 Needs assessment, 12–13 Negative reinforcement, 246 Nephrotic syndrome, 34 Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, 36 Nutrition, See Diet and nutrition Nutritional assessment, 96–102 case management, 102 community environment, 97 dietary intake, 98–100 home environment, 96–99 physical activity, 97–98 physical and laboratory, 100–102 school environment, 97 Nutritional care plan, 102 Nutrition education, 133–142, 262–265, See also Eating behaviors, behavioral modification techniques alternative dietary approaches, 136–137 “anytime” foods and beverages, 357–358 food groups, 354–358 food portion and unit lists, 349–353 goals and strategies for parents, 142 group counseling, 134 individual counseling, 133 multidisciplinary settings, 134–136 organizational resources and programs, 327–329 parental education, 89–90 sample curriculum, 138–141 calcium, 140–141, 365 cooking demonstrations, 139, 264 fiber, 265, 370 food labs, 139, 263–264 games, 139–140, 264 recipes, 361–364 Weight-o-Rama game, 388–389
O Obesity-associated comorbidities, 11, 32–38, 41–42, 81, 86, 88–89, 147, 211, 224, See also specific diseases or health issues cardiovascular complications, 33–34, 88, See also Cardiovascular diseases endocrine disorders, 32, 81, 86, 87, See also Insulin resistance gastrointestinal system, 36 genetic predisposition, 2 genetic syndromes, 32 medical history, 82–83
399 orthopedic complications, 12, 37–38, 81, 82, 89 predictive issues, 2 prevalence, 10 psychopathology, 56–57, See also Psychosocial factors pulmonary complications, 37, 88 review of systems, 84 sleep disorders, 37, 88 Obesity treatment, See Treatment of obesity Obstructive sleep apnea, 37, 88 Organizational resources and programs, 327–329 Orientation meeting, 21, 237 checklist, 295 handout, 293–294 Orlistat, 4, 212–214, 216–217 Orthopedic complications, 37–38, 81, 83, 87 Osteoporosis, 140 Outdoor play sessions, 262, 345
P Parental inactivity, 79 Parental influences, 42 Parental involvement and pediatric weight loss, 150, 164, 165 Parental nutrition education, 88, See also Nutrition education Parental role models, 163, 246–247 Parent training or modeling interventions, 165–166 Pathways program, 3 Patient evaluation, See Clinical evaluation Patient screening, 21 Peanut butter, 355 Pediatric overweight and obesity academic performance and, 173 associated health problems, See Obesity-associated comorbidities causes, 41 CDC definitions, 46 critical period for, 80–81, 121 diagnosing, 42, 82–86 economic burden of, 10 negative stereotyping, 60 population-level intervention recommendations, 2–5 prevalence, 1–2, 12, 80, 147, 211 stigmatization and labeling, 2, 60 vicious cycle, 173 weight-based teasing, 59–60 Pediatric weight management programs assessing readiness and commitment, 244–245 designing, 14–16 efficacy, 20 eligibility and referral, 13 evaluating, 24 follow-up, 23, 44 goals and objectives, 13–14 health promotion models, 11, 14–15 interactive interdisciplinary exercise instruction, See Exercise interventions, interactive, interdisciplinary program
400
Handbook of Pediatric Obesity: Clinical Management
interdisciplinary interactive approach, 235–240, 243–265, See also Interdisciplinary, interactive pediatric weight-management program Internet and, 201–207, See also Internet-based treatment knowledge and public understanding and support, 11 literature review, family-based counseling interventions, 150–163 local availability, 43 marketing and promotion, 15–16 medical supervision, 44 motivational techniques for physical activity, See Physical activity, motivational techniques patient evaluation/examination, See Clinical evaluation planning process, 11–14 provider reimbursement, 15 referrals, 86, 88–89 relapse prevention, 250, 382 sample nutrition education curriculum, 138–141 successful/unsuccessful weight losers, 135 weight maintenance, 164 Pediatric weight management programs, clinical management forms, 273–307 aerobic activity and food checklist, 371 behavior substitution or restructuring, 381 benefits and sacrifices, 375 blood test preparation letter, 299 class schedule, 275, 296 clearance, 283 cognitive restructuring, 379 commitment rating, 374 evaluation checklist, 300 evaluation form, 302 evaluation results, 303 evaluation station checklist, 301 fitness evaluation, 304–305 initial group check-in, 372 initial parent questionnaire, 286–291 job description, 273–274 medical history and physical, 279–282 orientation checklist, 295 orientation handout, 293–294 phone screening and information, 276 physician referral, 277 program information letter, 284–285 quarterly evaluation results, 306 registration, 278 sample spreadsheet, 307 short-term and long-term goals, 377 weekly clinic checklist, 297 weekly group check-in, 373 weight record, 298 Pediatric weight management programs, implementing, 16–24, See also Interdisciplinary, interactive pediatric weight-management program absentee management, 240 assessment, See Clinical evaluation assignment to appropriate treatment, 22 awards and graduation, 23–24 baseline evaluation, 22
examination and screening, 23, See also Clinical evaluation family exercise and fitness sessions, 251 finances, 19–20 information session and registration, 21 initial lesson, 23 intervention classes, 23 materials and supplies, 18–19 orientation meeting, 22, 237 progress monitoring, 238–239 referral, 20–21 resources for materials, 325–326 scheduling, 18 space, 18 staffing, 17–18 step-by-step instructions, 20–24 Percentage of ideal body weight (%IBW), 68 Pharmacotherapy, 4, 81–82, 212–217 antidepressants, 56 bariatric surgery and, 230 clinical implications, 216–217 metformin, 212, 215–216 orlistat, 4, 212–214, 216 sibutramine, 4, 212, 214–215, 216 Phone screening information form, 276 Physical activity, 89, 179, See also Exercise academic performance and, 173 advantages and disadvantages for obese child, 67–68 assessing, 47–48, 97–98, 319–320 behavioral modification techniques, 148 child enjoyment of, 174 determinants of, 174–175 employee program, 330 family variables, 174 fitness evaluation form, 304–305 increasing in clinical settings, 173–185 interdisciplinary interactive approach, See Exercise interventions, interactive, interdisciplinary program motivating strategies, See Physical activity, motivational techniques motor performance, 70–71 parental inactivity and, 80 program objectives, 14 social support and, 174 vicious cycle of obesity, 173 Physical activity, motivational techniques, 72, 177–185 contracting, 177 individualizing programs, 178 initial evaluation, 177–178 MPEP, See Moderate Intensity Progressive Exercise Program music, 178 rewards, 246 role modeling, 181 social cognitive theory application, 178–184 team/group versus individual, 178 theories and models, 175–177, See also Motivational theories and models Physical exam, 84–85, 279–282 Physical Work Capacity Test (PWC), 319
Index Physician referral, 20–21, 43, 277 Physician’s role, 17, 42–49 Physiologic feedback training, 179 Piers–Harris Children’s Self Concept Scale, 107 Pizza recipe, 364 Planned behavior, theory of, 176 Planning process for health promotion interventions, 11–14 Play areas indoor, 343–344 outdoor, 262, 345 Policy, Regulatory, and Organizational Constructs in Educational and Environmental Development (PROCEED), 11 Polycystic ovary disease, 35–36, 86 Portion control, 125, 135, 240 food groups, 354–358 food portion and unit lists, 349–353 food record practice, 364 Positive reinforcement, 177 Postural training, 181–182, 259 Posture, 71 Prader–Willi syndrome, 32, 86 PRECEDE model, 11 Predisposing, Reinforcing, and Enabling constructs Educational/Ecological diagnosis and Evaluation (PRECEDE), 11 Pregnancy nutrition, 80–81, 83 Prevalence of pediatric obesity and overweight, 1–2, 11, 80, 147, 211 Prevention issues, 11, 91 Problem solving, 149, 165 PROCEED model, 11 Protein modified fast (PMF) diet, 137–138, 163, 235, 366–369 Protein-sparing modified fast (PSMF) diet, 137, 160, 162 Protein substitutes, 354–355 Pseudohypoparathyroidism, 32 Pseudotumor cerebri, 12, 82 Psychological evaluation, 48 bariatric surgery candidates, 226–227 interdisciplinary interactive approach, 237 Psychopathology, 56–57, 81, 89, 98 Psychosocial factors, 55–63, 148, 211 assessing, 98, See also Psychosocial tools body image, 59 eating disorders, 56–57 family issues, 57–59 quality of life, 61 school performance, 60 social reinforcement and modeling, 149 underlying/comorbid psychopathology, 56–57 weight-based teasing, 59–60 Psychosocial tools, 61–63, See also Behavioral therapy anxiety, 107 depression, 107 eating disorders, 108–109 family measures, 109–110 self-esteem, 107 Puberty and obesity, 2–3 “Pull Your Own Weight” exercises, 347 Pulmonary complications, 37, 88
401
Q Questionnaires and information forms, See Pediatric weight management programs, clinical management forms
R Ranitidine, 230 Rating of perceived exertion, 71 Recipes, 361–364 Referral, 13, 20–21, 43 comorbid health problems, 85–88, See also Obesityassociated comorbidities physician referral form, 277 social services, 89 surgical decisions, 223–225 Registration form, 278 Relapse prevention, 148, 250, 382 Resistance, rolling with, 63 Resistance training, 69–70, 256, 339 program, 342 Resting vagal activity, 114 Rewards and incentives, 206, 247, 249 Reynolds Adolescent Depression Scale (RADS), 107 Risk factors for pediatric obesity, 84 Risky behaviors, 56–57 Role models, 149, 183 Role plays, vignettes or scenarios, 387 Rolling with resistance, 63 Roux-en-Y gastric bypass, 228 Rules for eating form, 383
S School environment, 60–61, 97 School performance, 60 Self-efficacy, 61–62, 63, 179 Self-esteem, 148, 173, 236 academic performance and, 60 assessment tools, 107 family dysfunction and, 57 Self-monitoring, 149, 248 Self-Perception Profile for Children, 107 Sexual abuse, 57–59, 89 Sexual maturation delay, 56 Sexual maturity rating, 49, 101, 225, 322 SHAPEDOWN, 134–135, 155 Shopping list, 363 Short-term and long-term goals form, 377 Sibutramine, 4, 212, 214–215, 216 Single-parent families, 58 Skinfold analysis, 47, 85, 317–318 Sleep apnea hypoventilation syndrome, 37 Sleep disorders, 37, 56, 82, 88 Slipped capital femoral epiphyses, 12, 81, 89 SMART, 11 Smoking reduction programs, 1–2, 244 Soccer, aerobic, 259
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Handbook of Pediatric Obesity: Clinical Management
Social Social Social Social
cognitive theory, 176–177, 179, 181, 234, 253 history, 83 learning theory, 181 Marketing Assessment and Response Tool (SMART), 11 Social reinforcement and modeling, 149 Social services, 89 Social Skills Rating System, 106 Social support for physical activity, 174 Societal triggers form, 250, 385 Socioeconomic status, 84 Soda consumption, 96, 100 Softball, aerobic, 337 Soy protein, 354–355 Spinal asymmetry, 89 Staffing, 17–18 Starches, 356 State-Trait Anxiety Inventory for Children (STAIC), 108 Steatohepatitis, 36 Stigmatization, 2, 236 Stimulus control, 149, 248 Strength training, 69–70, 254, 260–261, 338–344 duration, 340 frequency, 339–340 health benefits, 339 muscular strength and endurance facts, 341–342 program, 342 “Pull Your Own Weight” exercises, 347 resistance weight training, 69–70, 256, 339 safety, 340 sample exercise, 341 stimulating muscle development, 343 suitable activities for obese children, 71–72 technique, 340 Stroke, 10 Subscapular skinfold, 318 Sugar-free beverages, 357 Support group structure, interdisciplinary, interactive programs, 236 Surgical intervention, See Bariatric surgery Swimming, 72 Syndrome X, 35 Systolic blood pressure, exercise effects, 115
Treatment of obesity approaches, 81–82 challenges, 11 clinical pediatric programs, See Pediatric weight management programs costs of, 10 dietary intervention approaches, See Dietary approaches follow-up, 90 goals of, 1, 13–14 guidelines, 89–90 individual approaches, 166–167 Internet and, 201–207, See also Internet-based treatment medications, See Pharmacotherapy multidisciplinary family-based approach, 42 parent-focused treatment, 166 physician’s role, 42–49 psychosocial factors, 56–63 surgery, See Bariatric surgery Triceps skinfold, 317 Triglycerides, 33, 34, 35 exercise and, 192–193 Trim Kids, 243 meal plans, 359–360 recipes, 361–363 Turner’s syndrome, 32, 86 Type 2 diabetes, See Diabetes type 2
U Underwater weighing, 47 Ursodiol, 230
V Vegetables food group, 355 Ventilatory anaerobic threshold, 115 Very-low calorie diets, 44, 122, 123, 127–128, 137, 163 Very-low density lipoprotein (VLDL), 33 Video game playing, 98 Volleyball, aerobic, 260, 345
T Take charge, 330 Tanner staging, 48, 101, 225, 322 Television, 59, 98, 250 Temptations and positive self-statements form, 386 Testing/measurement protocols, 311–322, See also Clinical evaluation; specific types Theory of planned behavior, 176 Three-bite rule, 247 Thyroid disorders, 32, 84, 86, 88 Time management skills, 174 Token economy, 245 Total body water (TBW), 47 Traffic Light Diet, 133, 134, 151–154, 157–159, 161, 331 Treadmill test, 115–116
W Waist circumference, 85–86 exercise and, 196 Warming up, 257–259, 332 Water-based activities, 71–72 Weight-based teasing, 59–60 Weight goals, 102 recommendations, 100 Weight measurement, 45, 100–101, 204, 311 weight record form, 298 Weight-o-Rama game, 388–389 Weight Reduction and Pride program, 156 Work, 182